JCE Online Journal of Chemical Education
 | Subscriptions  | Software Orders  | Support  | Contributors  | Advertisers  | 

JCE Print

JCE Digital Library

JCE Software

Only@JCE Online

About JCE


  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2001  > December  >
Chemistry for Everyone
Products of Chemistry
Humic Acids: Marvelous Products of Soil Chemistry
Geoffrey Davies and Elham A. Ghabbour
Barnett Institute and the Chemistry Department, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115

Cornelius Steelink
Chemistry Department, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721

Cover
December 2001
Vol. 78 No. 12
p. 1609

Abstract
Humic acids (HAs) are remarkable brown to black products of soil chemistry that are essential for healthy and productive soils. Current HA models help to explain HAs' origins and behavior as flexible, aliphatic-aromatic, highly functionalized molecules that can act as photosensitizers, retain water, bind to clays, act as plant growth stimulants, and scavenge toxic pollutants. No synthetic material can match HAs' physical and chemical versatility. Removal of HAs from water avoids disinfection by-products such as chloroform and is a required step in production of potable water. HAs can bind soil toxins along with plant nutrients and they strongly stabilize soils. For these reasons more widespread HA production from composting and future applications of HAs extracted from coal will help to combat water and soil pollution, fight soil erosion, and lessen our dependence on chemical fertilizers.


Featured on the Cover

More Information
*  Citation
Davies, Geoffrey; Ghabbour, Elham A.; Steelink, Cornelius. J. Chem. Educ. 2001 78 1609.
*  Keywords
Agricultural Chemistry; Carbon; Environmental Chemistry; Hydrogen; Metals; Natural Products; Nitrogen; Plant Chemistry; Water / Water Chemistry
*  History
Created:
Last Updated:
November 2, 2001
August 31, 2005
  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2001 > December > Page 1609


Subscriptions

JCE HS CLIC

Our Secondary School editors work hard to distill all the JCE materials to produce a fraction of particular interest to high school teachers. We call it CLIC.


Contributions Welcome
JCE welcomes your submission

Advertisers
In recent years we have worked hard to better match our advertisers with our readers. When shopping for chemistry education materials, visit our advertisers' WWW sites first.

Be An Ambassador
Take JCE along on your outreach missions. Copies of the Journal, guest access to JCE Online, our publications catalog, and more are available for your participants.