biggreg
Member
On CEC/mass:
The simple substitution of lighter weight aeration into the mix would increase my CEC/mass without increasing my CEC/volume. If my soil's CEC-7 is 40cmole/kg and if the remix with lighter aeration weighs .7 of the original, then my CEC-7 would be 57.
CEC per volume wouldn't change. 100 cmoles/kg soil may have equal exchange sites to some 40 cmole/kg soil that has a higher bulk density.
cmole/L or meq/100cm3 is the relevant unit to judge the buffer capacity of my soil vs yours vs anyone else's. cmole/kg or meq/100g is just the raw data from the test.
We must multiply by bulk density (g/cm3) to make it relevant in all soils, "standard" soil just happens to be 1g/1cm3. 1/1=1 multiply the raw data on a standard soil CEC/mass or an elemental ppm-mass test by 1 to get the relevant per volume measurement.
The simple substitution of lighter weight aeration into the mix would increase my CEC/mass without increasing my CEC/volume. If my soil's CEC-7 is 40cmole/kg and if the remix with lighter aeration weighs .7 of the original, then my CEC-7 would be 57.
CEC per volume wouldn't change. 100 cmoles/kg soil may have equal exchange sites to some 40 cmole/kg soil that has a higher bulk density.
cmole/L or meq/100cm3 is the relevant unit to judge the buffer capacity of my soil vs yours vs anyone else's. cmole/kg or meq/100g is just the raw data from the test.
We must multiply by bulk density (g/cm3) to make it relevant in all soils, "standard" soil just happens to be 1g/1cm3. 1/1=1 multiply the raw data on a standard soil CEC/mass or an elemental ppm-mass test by 1 to get the relevant per volume measurement.
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