ADSORPTION AND INTERACTIONS OF DIQUAT AND PARAQUAT WITH MONTMORILLONITE

Citation
G. Rytwo et al., ADSORPTION AND INTERACTIONS OF DIQUAT AND PARAQUAT WITH MONTMORILLONITE, Soil Science Society of America journal, 60(2), 1996, pp. 601-610
Citations number
43
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Soil Science
ISSN journal
03615995
Volume
60
Issue
2
Year of publication
1996
Pages
601 - 610
Database
ISI
SICI code
0361-5995(1996)60:2<601:AAIODA>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to elucidate details of the interactions between the divalent cationic herbicides diquat (DQ) and paraquat (PQ) and montmorillonite. Interactions were studied by ultraviolet absorpt ion (UV) and linear dichroism infrared (LDIR) spectroscopies, x-ray di ffraction, and adsorption isotherm measurements. For added herbicide a mounts below the cation-exchange capacity (CEC) of the clay, adsorptio n was almost complete. At saturation, the adsorption of DQ was 125% of the CFC, whereas PQ adsorbed up to the CEC. In competitive adsorption experiments, when total cationic charges exceeded the CEC, monovalent organic cations were preferentially adsorbed to the clay at the expen se of the divalent cations, in accord with the expected larger exclusi on of divalent cations from positively charged surfaces. Adsorption of the divalent herbicides reduced the basal spacing of the clay from 1. 45 mn to approximate to 1.30 mn. This result implies the desorption of interlayer water and can be explained in terms of the flat orientatio n of the adsorbed PQ cation and the compact size and keying of the DQ cation into the ditrigonal cavity of the basal surface of the clay. Th is explanation is also supported by LDIR results, For adsorption up to the CEC, the main UV absorption bands of the herbicides around 300 nm were red shifted. The absorption spectrum of DQ adsorbed beyond the C EC suggests that some of the molecules were attached to the clay via w eaker interactions, similar to the mechanisms found for monovalent org anic cations. In view of the low basal spacing of the clay, the observ ed red shift cannot be due to the existence of DQ or PQ dimers.