| Literature DB >> 24873713 |
Jingying Xu1, Dan B Kleja2, Harald Biester3, Anders Lagerkvist1, Jurate Kumpiene4.
Abstract
Feasibility of soil washing to remediate Hg contaminated soil was studied. Dry sieving was performed to evaluate Hg distribution in soil particle size fractions. The influence of dissolved organic matter and chlorides on Hg dissolution was assessed by batch leaching tests. Mercury mobilization in the pH range of 3-11 was studied by pH-static titration. Results showed infeasibility of physical separation via dry sieving, as the least contaminated fraction exceeded the Swedish generic guideline value for Hg in soils. Soluble Hg did not correlate with dissolved organic carbon in the water leachate. The highest Hg dissolution was achieved at pH 5 and 11, reaching up to 0.3% of the total Hg. The pH adjustment was therefore not sufficient for the Hg removal to acceptable levels. Chlorides did not facilitate Hg mobilization under acidic pH either. Mercury was firmly bound in the studied soil thus soil washing might be insufficient method to treat the studied soil.Entities:
Keywords: Mobilization; Organic matter; Soil remediation; pH-dependent dissolution
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24873713 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.02.058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086