Geochemical Transactions (May 2019)

The effect of pH and ionic strength on the adsorption of glyphosate onto ferrihydrite

  • Rodrigo C. Pereira,
  • Pedro R. Anizelli,
  • Eduardo Di Mauro,
  • Daniel F. Valezi,
  • Antonio Carlos S. da Costa,
  • Cássia Thaïs B. V. Zaia,
  • Dimas A. M. Zaia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12932-019-0063-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Although, glyphosate (N-(phosphonomethyl) glycine) is one of the most widely used herbicides in the world, its interaction with poorly crystalline iron oxides, such as ferrihydrite, is not well studied. In this research, we examined the adsorption of glyphosate onto ferrihydrite using infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), adsorption kinetic models and adsorption isotherm models. The effect of pH and sodium chloride concentration on the adsorption of glyphosate onto ferrihydrite as well as the effect of extractors (CaCl2 0.010 mol L−1 and Mehlich) on the desorption of glyphosate were also evaluated. There are two important findings described in this work. First, 84% of adsorbed glyphosate strongly interacted to ferrihydrite as an inner-sphere complex and phosphate and amine groups are involved in this interaction. Second, an increase of sodium chloride salt concentration increased the adsorption of glyphosate onto ferrihydrite. The non-linear Langmuir model and pseudo second order model showed a good agreement of theoretical limit of glyphosate adsorbed onto ferrihydrite, 54.88 µg mg−1 and 48.8 µg mg−1, respectively. The adsorption of glyphosate onto ferrihydrite decreased when the pH increased. Under the conditions used in this work, EPR spectra did not show dissolution of ferrihydrite. Surface area, pore volume and pHpzc of ferrihydrite decreased after adsorption of glyphosate.

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