Literature DB >> 31745769

Transport of uranium(VI) in red soil in South China: influence of initial pH and carbonate concentration.

Haiying Fu1,2, Dexin Ding3,4, Yang Sui5, Hui Zhang1,2, Nan Hu1,2, Feng Li1,2, Zhongran Dai1,2, Guangyue Li1,2, Yongjun Ye1,2, Yongdong Wang1,2.   

Abstract

Uranium-contaminated wastewater associated with uranium (U) mining and processing inevitably releases into soil environment. In order to assess the risk of U wastewater contamination to groundwater through percolation, U adsorption and transport behavior in a typical red soil in South China was investigated through batch adsorption and column experiments, and initial pH and carbonate concentration were considered of the high-sulfate background electrolyte solution. Results demonstrated that U adsorption isotherms followed the Freundlich model. The adsorption of U to red soil significantly decreased with the decrease of the initial pH from 7 to 3 in the absence of carbonate, protonation-deprotonation reactions controlled the adsorption capacity, and lnCs had a linear relationship with the equilibrium pH (pHeq). In the presence of carbonate, the adsorption was much greater than that in the absence of carbonate owing to the pHeq values buffered by carbonate, but the adsorption decreased with the increase of the carbonate concentration from 3.5 to 6.5 mM. Additionally, the breakthrough curves (BTCs) obtained by column experiments showed that large numbers of H+ and CO32- competed with the U species for adsorption sites, which resulted in BTC overshoot (C/C0 > 1). Numerical simulation results indicated that the BTCs at initial pH 4 and 5 could be well simulated by two-site chemical non-equilibrium model (CNEM), whereas the BTCs of varying initial carbonate concentrations were suitable for one-site CNEM. The fractions of equilibrium adsorption sites (f) seemed to correlate with the fractions of positively charged complexes of U species in solution. The values of partition coefficients (kd') were lower than those measured in batch adsorption experiments, but they had the same variation trend. The values of first-order rate coefficient (ω) for all BTCs were low, representing a relatively slow equilibrium between U in the liquid and solid phases. In conclusion, the mobility of U in the red soil increased with the decrease of the initial pH and with the increase of the initial carbonate concentrations.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Column experiment; Competitive adsorption; Hydrus-1D; Overshoot; Uranium migration

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31745769     DOI: 10.1007/s11356-019-06644-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int        ISSN: 0944-1344            Impact factor:   4.223


  26 in total

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5.  Additive surface complexation modeling of uranium(VI) adsorption onto quartz-sand dominated sediments.

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7.  Fate and transport of uranium (VI) in weathered saprolite.

Authors:  Young-Jin Kim; Scott C Brooks; Fan Zhang; Jack C Parker; Ji-Won Moon; Yul Roh
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8.  Transport of U(VI) through sediments amended with phosphate to induce in situ uranium immobilization.

Authors:  Vrajesh S Mehta; Fabien Maillot; Zheming Wang; Jeffrey G Catalano; Daniel E Giammar
Journal:  Water Res       Date:  2014-12-03       Impact factor: 11.236

9.  Comparison of U(VI) adsorption onto nanoscale zero-valent iron and red soil in the presence of U(VI)-CO3/Ca-U(VI)-CO3 complexes.

Authors:  Zhibin Zhang; Jun Liu; Xiaohong Cao; Xuanping Luo; Rong Hua; Yan Liu; Xiaofeng Yu; Likai He; Yunhai Liu
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10.  Uranium and Cesium sorption to bentonite colloids under carbonate-rich environments: Implications for radionuclide transport.

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Journal:  Sci Total Environ       Date:  2018-06-22       Impact factor: 7.963

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