4.6 Article

Determination of sulfate, nitrate, and chloride in throughfall using ion-exchange resins

Journal

WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION
Volume 153, Issue 1-4, Pages 343-354

Publisher

SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
DOI: 10.1023/B:WATE.0000019958.59277.ed

Keywords

atmospheric deposition; heterogeneous terrain; ion exchange; landscape; resin column; sulfate; throughfall

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Throughfall, the solution that falls from the forest canopy, is an important and commonly measured flux in forest ecosystem studies. Throughfall water and chemistry are highly variable spatially, requiring large numbers of collectors to quantify it. This and the fact that the solution can be chemically unstable make throughfall sampling very labor intensive, thus we have developed a method to reduce the field labor portion of this effort. Our throughfall collection method uses compact ion exchange resin columns that need only be collected every 1 - 2 months. The resin columns are subsequently extracted with 1.0 M potassium iodide (KI), releasing anions back into solution, with extraction efficiencies > 94% for sulfate, nitrate, and chloride. The extracts are analyzed by ion-chromatography (IC) to determine the total microequivalents of anions per unit area of collector surface collected over the period of resin column exposure. This ion exchange resin method was originally developed for a project in which we needed to deploy over 300 throughfall collectors to quantify throughfall variability across mountainous terrain with heterogeneous vegetation.

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