PMID: 7529165Oct 1, 1994Paper

Influence of different factors on the adsorption of carbofuran (2, 3-dihydro-2,2-dimethyl-7-benzofuranyl-N-methyl carbamate) on soils

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
R P SinghD Singh

Abstract

The effects of exchangeable cations (H+ and Na+), autoclaving, organic matter, cationic and anionic surfactants, and temperature on the adsorption of carbofuran on two different types of soils were studied. The adsorption isotherms for all effects/treatments were in close agreement with the Freundlich equation and yielded S-shaped isotherms. The amount of carbofuran adsorbed in all cases was higher in Jhansi red loam soil than in Pilibhit sandy loam soil and was related to organic matter content, clay content, CaCO3 content, surface area, and cation-exchange capacity of the soils. The adsorption on soils from both sites follows the order H soil-->Na soil-->natural soil at 25 degrees C-->autoclaved soil-->soil from which organic matter had been removed-->cationic surfactant-->anionic surfactant-->natural soil at 50 degrees C and was in accordance with Freundlich constant K values and distribution coefficient Kd values. The adsorptive capacity of carbofuran for organic matter and clay content for both the Jhansi and the Pilibhit soils was also evaluated by calculating Kom and Kc values, and it was found that the carbofuran adsorption was better correlated with clay content than with organic matter content of soils. On the basis o...Continue Reading

References

Apr 1, 1986·Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety·K G VarshneyR P Singh
Aug 1, 1988·Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety·K KumariS K Saxena
Apr 1, 1987·Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety·R P SinghS K Saxena
May 1, 1980·Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology·A Felsot, J Wilson

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Citations

Nov 20, 2002·Environment International·Tibor CserhátiGyula Oros
Apr 5, 2011·Journal of Hazardous Materials·Alipio Bermúdez-CousoManuel Arias-Estévez

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