Sorption isotherms for a hydrophobic solute probe,
phenanthrene, were measured experimentally for 27
different
soils and sediments. The linear and Freundlich
isotherm
models and the Dual Reactive Domain Model (DRDM)
were used to fit the resulting data. The results reveal
for
all soils and sediments studied that (i) the
Freundlich
model and the DRDM fit the data well, whereas a linear
model fails to do so; (ii) values of the organic
carbon-normalized
distribution coefficient, K
OC, calculated from
individual
isotherm points for a specific sorbent−solute system
vary
significantly with the aqueous-phase solute concentration,
C
e; and (iii) all commonly used correlations of
K
OC with octanol−water partitioning coefficients and solute solubility
limits
significantly underestimate K
OC for
C
e values smaller than
approximately one-tenth of aqueous-phase solute
solubility,
C
S. The sorption behaviors of all of the
soils and sediments
studied are thus inconsistent with the simple concept of
linear phase partitioning. The general applicability of
the
DRDM, a polymer-based limiting case form of the
Distributed
Reactivity Model, for all systems studied supports
mechanistic
arguments based on polymer sorption
theory.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.