Colloid Chemistry An Introduction With Some Practical Applications

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Of Agric. , Bureau of Soils, Bull. No. 10, 1897) pointed out that very small quantities of certain organic substances, such as are con- tinually being produced in the soil by the decay of organic matter, greatly decrease the surface tension of solutions, thus counteracting to a large extent the effects of the surface application of soluble salts which would tend to draw moisture to the surface by increasing the surface tension of the capillary water of soils. It is well known, however, that an ...excess of salts will ruin a soil physically, as is evident after flooding by sea water or the excessive application of chemical fertilizers. Of interest in this connection is the recent work of the Bureau of Soils, U. S. Department of Agriculture, carried out by Cameron, Schreiner, Livingston and their co-workers. Thus plants grown in the unproductive Ta- koma soil, were greatly benefitted by green manure, oak leaves, tannin and pyrogallol. The injurious effects of quinone and some other organic substances may be due to their ability to precipitate or flocculate the pro- tective colloids of the soil; for as Lumiere and Seyewetz have shown (Bull.

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