Five-year-old red spruce saplings (Picea rubens Sarg.) were exposed to either (1) acid fog consisting of a mixture of H(2)SO(4) and HNO(3) adjusted to pH 2.5, (2) distilled-water fog at pH 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoils, subsoils, and aquifer materials can be modified with hydrophobic cationic surfactants to increase their sorption capabilities for organic contaminants. The objective of this study was to examine in detail the sorptive characteristics of the natural loess soil and the resultant organo-modified soils for aqueous-phase neutral organic compounds (NOCs) in an attempt to define the operative sorptive mechanisms. Under the laboratory conditions, a series of modified loess soils in this study were prepared by replacing the cations of loess soil with both cationic surfactant hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (HDTMA-Br) and anionic surfactant sodium dodethylbenzene sulfonate (SDBS).
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