Chapter 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Countries that are considered to have older soils?

A

Tropical countries

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2
Q

Countries that have “younger soil”.

A

Temperate countries

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3
Q

What is the charge of the soils in tropical countries

A

positively charged

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4
Q

What is the charge of the soils in temperate countries?

A

negatively charged

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5
Q

Are soils in temperate countries more fertile than in tropical countries?

A

True

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6
Q

Soils in tropical countries are positively charged and considered older soils because of the presence of what?

A

sesquioxides
kaolinites
Fe/Al

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7
Q

It refers to the cations adsorbed on negatively charged surfaces.

A

CEC - Cation Exchange Capacity

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8
Q

Does higher pH lead to higher or lower CEC?

A

higher CEC

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9
Q

Does a lower pH lead to a higher or a lower CEC?

A

lower CEC

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10
Q

It refers to the anions adsorbed on positively charged surfaces.

A

AEC - anion exchange capacity

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11
Q

The degree to which soil can adsorb and exchange anions.

A

AEC - anion exchange capacity

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12
Q

What will happen to AEC at higher pH?

A

decreases or lower AEC

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13
Q

What will happen to AEC at lower pH?

A

increases or higher AEC

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14
Q

AEC plus specifically adsorbed anions plus anions retained (sorbed) by other mechanisms like precipitation or adsorption into colloid complexes, particularly the organic and amorphous complexes.

A

ASC - anion sorption capacity

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15
Q

Net accumulation of materials at the interface between a solid phase and an aqueous solution phase.

A

Adsorption

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16
Q

Repulsion of anions from colloidal surfaces possessing negative charges.

A

Negative adsorption

17
Q

Material that accumulates at the interface (sorbed anion).

A

adsorbate

18
Q

The solid (colloid) surface on which the material accumulates.

A

adsorbent

19
Q

The result of surface protonation or also called “physisorption”.

A

non-specific adsorption

20
Q

The electrostatic attraction of anions by positively charged surfaces as variable charged colloids.

A

non-specific adsorption