Science Inventory

THE SWELLING PROPERTIES OF SOIL ORGANIC MATTER AND THEIR RELATION TO SORPTION OF NON-IONIC ORGANIC COMPOUNDS

Citation:

Lyon, W. G. AND D. E. Rhodes. THE SWELLING PROPERTIES OF SOIL ORGANIC MATTER AND THEIR RELATION TO SORPTION OF NON-IONIC ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/2-91/033 (NTIS 91-217406), 1991.

Impact/Purpose:

publish information

Description:

A method has been developed to measure the swelling properties of Concentrated natural organic materials in various organic liquids, and has been applied to various eat, pollen, chitin and cellulose samples. The swelling of these macromolecular aterials is rhe volumetric manifestation of bulk sorption, i.e., sorption by dissolution (or partitioning) of the sorbed liquids into the macromolecular solid phase. Direct evidence for the existence of this category of sorbed materials has been obtained for soil organic materials by the present research; swelling in liquids has long been known in coals and polymers. Bulk sorbed molecules are thought to be inaccessible to direct biological attack, and may represent a continuing source of low-level rebound contamination of groundwater at a polluted site. Equilibration of bulk-sorbed molecules with liquid phases surrounding the particles is kinetically slow (diffusion limited) relative to sorption and fluid movement, and this sluggishness is probably responsible for some nonequilibrium sorption phenomena seen in soil column flow experiments. Molecules with molar volumes greater than about 93 cm3 mol-1 appear to be strongly excluded from sorption inside the soil organic materials studied in this work. In contrast, cellulose excluded molecules with molar volumes greater than about 88 cm3 mol-1. Extensive bibliographies included.

URLs/Downloads:

www.ntis.gov   Exit EPA's Web Site

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PUBLISHED REPORT/ REPORT)
Product Published Date:01/01/1991
Record Last Revised:09/02/2008
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 126242