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Cation exchange, hydrolysis and clay movement during the displacement of saline solutions from soils by water

✍ Scribed by Mukhtar M. Marwan; David L. Rowell


Publisher
Springer
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
680 KB
Volume
16
Category
Article
ISSN
0342-7188

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✦ Synopsis


Deterioration of soil physical conditions occurs when rain or irrigation water displaces soluble salts during reclamation and subsequent management of salinesodic soils. Damage, which depends primarily on the presence of exchangeable Na § appears to be ameliorated during leaching by exchange of Ca 2+ and Mg 2 § for Na + and loss of exchangeable Na § by hydrolysis. The extent of these processes has been measured by leaching columns of repacked soil with water after preparation with Na § and Ca 2+ or Na + and Mg 2 § as the exchangeable cations and high or low (1 or 0.1 molc1-1) initial salinities. Structural deterioration was monitored by changes in flow rate, and soil properties were measured both initially and after cutting the leached columns into layers. Preliminary studies established reliable methods for measuring exchangeable cations and cation exchange capacity in the saline soils. In a sandy loam (Na-Ca system), clay dispersion and movement occurred particularly in the upper layers as measured both by decreases in CEC and by the amount of clay in the leachate. Cation exchange and hydrolysis of exchangeable Na + during leaching reduced the exchangeable Na + percentage, although cation exchange was restricted to columns with high initial salinity. In a clay textured soil (Na-Ca system) there was negligible clay movement, and cation exchange and hydrolysis occurred in columns with both high and low initial salinities: cation exchange may have been encouraged by diffusion limited preferential release of Na + from aggregates during by-pass flow. In the sandy loam (Na-Mg system) Mg 2+ increased the preference of the soil for exchangeable Na + compared to the Na-Ca system. There was no cation exchange even in columns with high initial salinity. The amounts of clay movement and hydrolysis were similar in the two systems. Conditions conductive to cation exchange are a high initial salinity, a