par De Almeida, Vicente;Szpoganicz, Bruno;Bonneville, Steeve
Référence Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society, 26, page (1848-1860)
Publication Publié, 2015
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Minerals in soils contribute significantly to the capacity of soils to buffer pH disturbance. In this paper, we present the pH buffering capacity of a common soil phyllosilicate mineral, biotite. We performed equilibrium potentiometric titrations and we also monitored the pH response kinetics of the mineral-water system in order to develop an out-of-equilibrium model able to capture the interactions between minerals and the surrounding aqueous fluid. During titrations, after each addition of titrant solution from pH 11 to ca. 3, the pH response patterns were monitored over time until reaching a pseudo-equilibrium pH value. Based on the potentiometric dataset, Best7 equilibrium calculations were performed to obtain the concentrations and the equilibrium protonation constants of each deprotonable component that fit best our titration curve. In parallel, the out-of-equilibrium pH responses over time at each point of the titration were used in a simple first-order kinetic approach that allow for the determination of “slow” proton exchange [H+ex]t0 (mol L-1) and the associated rate constants for the exchange reactions, k (s-1). Our results show a maximum in “slow” proton exchange [H+ex]t0 associated to a minimal value of k at pH < 5 while at neutral and basic pHs exhibits the opposite, i.e., fast rate constant for a minimum value of the “slow” proton exchange. Expressing the observed “slow” proton exchange processes in terms of entropy production, our result demonstrate that the maximum resilience – stability – of biotite–water system to pH perturbation is in acidic pH, probably due to the consumption of proton associated with biotite dissolution reactions.