Literature DB >> 19110294

Pb, Zn and Cd mobility, availability and fractionation in aged soil remediated by EDTA leaching.

Metka Udovic1, Domen Lestan.   

Abstract

Soil washing remediation techniques usually remove only the labile heavy metal (HM) species from the soil, leaving the residual ones in less available/mobile forms, thus disturbing the chemical equilibrium among different species of HM in the soil. Re-establishing such equilibrium and shifting HM back to more available/mobile chemical forms could occur after exposing the remediated soil to environmental abiotic (ageing) factors. Contaminated soil from a smelter site (Pb 4600 mg kg(-1), Zn 1800 mg kg(-1), Cd 30 mg kg(-1)) was leached with increasing EDTA concentrations (2.5, 5.0, 10.0, 20.0, 40.0 and 4-consecutive steps of 40.0 mmol EDTA kg(-1) of soil). A gradient of removed HM was reached: from 6% to 73% of initial Pb, from 3% to 23% of initial Zn and from 17% to 74% of initial Cd were removed. Repetitive temperature changes (105 degrees C and -20 degrees C) were used to mimic abiotic factors acting on residual HM after EDTA soil leaching in saturated soil at 10% and 90% of soil water holding capacity. Fractionation using sequential extractions, mobility, and phytoavailability of Pb, Zn and Cd and Pb oral bioavailability were determined for aged and non-aged soil. The ageing treatment consistently lowered HM phytoavailability in the original (non-leached) and all treated (chelant-leached) soils. However, Pb, Zn and Cd behaved differently from each other; Pb mobility increased, Cd mobility decreased, while Zn mobility did not change. The results indicate that abiotic (ageing) processes change the availability/mobility of residual HM in all leaching treatments and should thus be considered in final remediation effectivity evaluation.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19110294     DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2008.11.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chemosphere        ISSN: 0045-6535            Impact factor:   7.086


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