Soils As Electrical Systems |
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This learning activity was designed by Dr. Larry P. Wilding of Texas A&M University
Materials Needed:Procedures:Observations and Interpretations:1. Before the wire electrodes are removed from the clay slurry, predict what you will find when the electrodes are removed. Which electrode do you think will have attracted the clay to accumulate about the bare wire? Why? 2. What general principle is being observed here? Anions (e.g. clay minerals) go to the anode (positive electrode) and cations (e.g. most plant nutrients-Ca, Mg, Na, K, etc. ) go to the cathode (negatively charged electrode). Hence, most plant nutrients (cations) in soils bond to clay surfaces. 3. If, instead of a clay suspension, suppose that the Methylene Blue dye solution had been used. In that case which electrode would you have predicted that the dye would have been plated out on--cathode or anode? 4. The demonstration here is the same principle used in electrolysis for resilvering a mirror. Silver chloride is used as the plating material. The mirror is placed in a solution of silver chloride. Cations of silver and anions of chloride form the silver chloride solution. An electric current is introduced into the solution such that the mirror is made the cathode. Hence, silver cations plate out on the mirror by the process of electrolysis. 5. This demonstration also confirms the electrical principle that LIKES REPEL AND UNLIKES ATTRACT. 6. This demonstration confirms the fact that SOILS ARE ELECTRICAL CHEMICAL SYSTEMS that provide remarkable potential to attract and hold plant nutrients. The more positive charges associated with the nutrient the tighter the adsorption to the soil. Also, the greater the clay and organic colloid content of the soil the greater the storage bank to hold nutrients available to plants. 7. The demonstration also supports the remarkable chemical buffering and filtering qualities of soils for cationic pollutants. Most soils also possess some anionic buffering potential but this is less effective than the cationic sorptive capacity. This is why the potential for nitrate pollution from water transport through soil systems is much greater than pollution from metal cations moving through soil systems. However, pollutants absorbed to soil colloidal surfaces can be major concerns to water quality when soil sediments are eroded into fresh water stream and aquifer bodies. |
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