Intraparticle diffusion in microporous amorphous oxides of aluminum, iron,
and manganese affects contaminant mobility and bioavailability in soils and
sediments. This sorption is a lengthy process, as such, predictive methods
to assess thermodynamic and transport parameters would be useful. Based on
enthalpies observed in recent work, adsorption of Zn, Cd, and Sr to amorph
ous oxides is a physical type of reaction where the metal ions retain their
waters of hydration. Consequently the adsorbate-surface interactions are a
function of electrostatic forces of attraction. Accordingly, knowing the h
ydrated radius and the hydration number of a metal cation, a correlation is
used to predict enthalpy and hence affinity. Using the resulting enthalpy
and the Polanyi relation, the activation energy was evaluated for Ni a nd C
a. Th is Polanyi relationship reveals that for a given metal the activation
energies with respect to these oxides are comparable. Additionally, metals
of the same periodic group appear to form similar sorption complexes with
a particular oxide and therefore have an equivalent Polanyi constant, alpha
. Assuming a sinusoidal function describes the surface potential along the
oxide surface, the surface diffusivity was predicted from the site activati
on theory. In this work, the predicted sorption parameters proved to be equ
ivalent to experimental ones given the associated errors.