Surface reactivity of A horizons towards polar compounds estimated from water adsorption and water content

The measurement of the specific surface area of soils may be useful for ranking soils in their ability to sorb polar compounds such as some pesticides and pollutants. For A horizons with varied mineralogy, particularly those containing large amounts of soil organic matter, this is problematic. We have estimated the surface area of a range of topsoils from water adsorption using the BET equation. The values obtained were greater than those measured from the adsorption of para-nitrophenol. There was a good relationship between the BET water area and the CEC of the samples (r2 = 0.83). There was a better relationship between the BET surface area and the water content of air-dry topsoils (r 2 = 0.98). We suggest that the air-dry water contents of topsoils could be used as a quick method to rank soils in order of their surface reactivity towards polar molecules, and this is preferable to more complicated methods.