1. Sequential Extraction of
Phosphorus from Soil: A
Geoarcheology Application
Ariel Atkinson, A.R. Smith Department of Chemistry, Appalachian
State University, Boone, NC 28607, Senior Research Final
Presentation under the supervision of Carol M. Babyak
2. Why?
-50 soil samples from Fayetteville, NC
-New I-95 loop will be built
-Surfer contour plot will be constructed
-Historical land use will be
recorded
http://www.ssg-surfer.com/ssg/detailed_description.php?products_id=135
Surfer Contour Plot
3. Inorganic phosphorus in soil can be
extracted in three different fractions
The amount of phosphorus in each
fraction is expressed as a percent of
total phosphorus in the soil
Used to determine what the land was
used for historically
Quantified either through
colorimetry or ICP-OES
Overview
4. Phosphorus
Abundant in the environment
Comes from a variety of human activities:
-farming -cleaning -food preparation
-medical care -waste
Stable in soil can reveal the historical land use
patterns.
6. Operational Definition of Phosphate
Fractions in Soil
Fraction I
Non-occluded
Fraction II
Occluded
Fraction III
Bound to calcium
Al
Al
OH
crystal surface
O
O
P
O
OH
Eidt, Science 1977, 197, 1327; Holliday, V.T. J. Archeological Science 2007, 34, 301.
Ca10(PO4)6F2
Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2
Al
Al
OH
O
O
P
O
O Al
Al
OH
Phosphate is part of an iron or
aluminum hydroxide mineral
Phosphate is part of a
calcium mineralPO4
3-
is weakly adsorbed
7. Correlation Between Fractionation of
Phosphorus and Land Use
Source FrI
%
FrII
%
FrIII
%
Total
(ppm)
Land Use
Norway 84 7 9 1256 Mixed veg. farming
Germany 82 10 8 78 Mixed veg. farming
Colombia 85 11 4 206 Mixed veg. farming
Germany 44 49 7 43 Forest (pine)
Wisconsin 34 54 12 315 Forest (maple)
Argentina 38 28 34 2324 Residential (abnd)
Wisconsin 40 20 40 1393 Residential(modern)
(Eidt, 1974)
8. Goals
Extract inorganic phosphorus from soil samples
Quantify phosphorus fractions in Fayetteville soil
using Murphy-Riley colorimetry
Quantify fractions in soil using ICP-OES
Compare colorimetry to ICP-OES
Possibly decide which method is superior
9. Soil Preparation and Extraction
Fraction Extraction Solvent
Fraction 1- Loosely Bound
Phosphorus
NaOH/NaCl-shake 12 hrs
Na3Cit/HCO3- heat 30 mins.
Fraction 2- Occluded Phosphorus Na3Cit/HCO3-heat
Na-dithionite-let oxidize for 8 days
Fraction 3-Calcium Phosphorus HCl-shake 4 hrs
1) Air dry overnight
2) Cone and Quarter
3) Sieve
4) Extraction on
2 g of soil
http://www.bridgewater.edu/~
koverway/courses/CHEM320/
ppts/Section2Sampling.pdf
Cone and
Quartering
Extraction Solvents for each Fraction
10. Methods of Quality Control
1) A sample duplicate every ten samples
2) A standard reference soil purchased from NIST
3) A calibration curve is produced using prepared phosphate
standards every time colorimetry or ICP-OES is
performed
11. Murphy-Riley Colorimetry
Molybdenum is added to the extract
A Molybdophosphoric acid is formed, and then reduced by sodium
citrate or ascorbic acid to form a blue color
The more intense the blue color, the more phosphorus present
Immediately quantified using a spectrophotometer
http://www.umaine.edu/SECRL/photos.htm
13. Colorimetry Results
%Fraction1 %Fraction 2 %Fraction 3
average % 38.32 57.12 4.57
stnd dev. 16.90 17.59 4.25
min 11.49 16.21 0.75
max 79.21 85.86 29.23
All extractions and colorimetry of
soil samples were performed
successfully from May to July 2007.
The results are highly variable
14. Quality Control Results
A rigorous quality control was followed May to July:
1) Percent differences for the duplicates ranges widely:
Fr1:24.4%
Fr2:17.5%,
Fr3:38.2%.
2)The SRM, certified by NIST to contain 860 mg of phosphate per kg
of soil, measured to contain an average of 612 mg/kg. 28.8%
difference
3) The average R-squared value, for the calibration curves, was 0.9932
15. Colorimetry Pros and Cons
-Inconsistencies between duplicates inhomogeneous soil or
non-reproducible extraction
-Requires a lot of preparation
-Time Consuming
-Fairly Good Calibration Curves
-Few Interferences
16. ICP-OES
Inductively coupled plasma-
optical emission spectroscopy
Extract is aspirated into the
torch of the ICP, where it is
atomized
Atoms become
excitedemitting photons at a
characteristic wavelength
Intensity of the emission is
correlated with the
concentration of the phosphorus
in the sample http://www.icp-oes.net/images/torche2.jpg
19. Further Work
Storage Time Study
Method development to
determine phosphorus
bonded to bottle walls
Running fresh extracts
on ICP-OES and
colorimetry
Construction of surfer
plots
20. Summary
- > 50 samples from Fayetteville were sequentially
extracted.
- > 200 extracts were analyzed using M-R colorimetry.
-Colorimetry data will be used to construct Surfer
plots.
-Due to sample storage, it is impossible to say whether
ICP-OES or colorimetry is the best method.
21. Acknowledgements
I would like to acknowledge the following people for
their help:
-Dr. Carol M Babyak
-Dr. Keith Seramur
-Dr. Shea Tuberty
-Dr. Lynn Siefferman
-The A.R. Smith Department of Chemistry
22. References
Eidt, Robert C. 1977.Detection and Examination of
Anthrosols by Phosphate Analysis. Science. 197. 4311: p.
30-34
Eidt, Robert. Woods. 1974. Theoretical and Practical
Considerations in the Analysis of Anthrosols. Abandoned
Settlement Analysis. 1st
ed, p.155-189.
Murphy, J. Riley,J.P.1962. A MODIFIED SINGLE
SOLUTION METHOD FOR THE DETERMINATION OF
PHOSPHATE IN NATURAL WATERS.
Anal.Chim.Acta, 27: 31-36.
Sobeck, Ebeling.2007. “Mass Spectrometric Analysis for
Phosphate in Soil Extracts.”Analytical Sciences
Digital Library E-UGR.
<http://www.asdlib.org/articles.php?type=eUGH>
Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and
Wastewater. 1999. p.4-139 – 4-147.