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Amendment Type and Dose Effects onto Coexisting Copper, Lead, and Nickel Ions Distribution in Soil

Authorized Users Only
2018
Authors
Šljivić-Ivanović, Marija Z.
Smičiklas, Ivana D.
Jović, Mihajlo D.
Dimović, Slavko
Onjia, Antonije
Article (Published version)
Metadata
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Abstract
The use of soil additives for toxic metals chemical stabilization aims to decrease in situ the pollutants' mobility and availability. In this study, the effectiveness of rinsed red mud (RBRM) and annealed animal bones (B400) was compared in terms of Cu, Pb and Ni stabilization in two contaminated soils with contrasting properties Dystric Cambisol (CM dy) and Rendzic Leptosol (LP rz). The mobility of metals in unamended soil samples (control) and samples amended with 1% and 5% of selected additives were compared using sequential extraction protocol. The relative content of metals in readily and potentially available fractions was higher in CM dy (62% Pb, 13% Cu, and 31% Ni in exchangeable fraction) than in LP rz ( lt 5% of Pb, Cu, Ni in exchangeable fraction). In CM dy, both additives have caused a decrease in metal mobility with an increase of their doses. The effect of 5% sorbent addition was most pronounced related to Pb immobilization, provoking decrease of exchangeable Pb content ...to lt 10%. Furthermore, B400 addition has redistributed investigated metals from the exchangeable to the residual phase more effectively than RBRM, and its effect on metal mobility decreased in the order Pb gt Cu gt Ni. Amending of LP rz soil had limited effects with no apparent decrease in exchangeable metal content. The effects of soil type variation, the type of additive and the additive dose onto metal mobility were compared according to ANOVA results. The content of readily and potentially available forms of metals was found to be (i) significantly correlated with all investigated variables for Pb, (ii) significantly correlated with soil type for Cu, and (iii) not in significant correlation with selected variables for Ni. Complex impacts of soil properties and treatment conditions on the mobility of co-contaminants emphasize the need for an individual approach to each case of contamination.

Keywords:
Soil remediation / Toxic metals / Mobility / Waste valorization / Soil additives / Sequential extraction
Source:
Water Air and Soil Pollution, 2018, 229, 10
Publisher:
  • Springer International Publishing Ag, Cham
Funding / projects:
  • Advanced technologies for monitoring and environmental protection from chemical pollutants and radiation burden (RS-43009)

DOI: 10.1007/s11270-018-3981-0

ISSN: 0049-6979

WoS: 000446522400002

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85054484144
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2
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URI
http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3925
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications (TMF)
Institution/Community
Tehnološko-metalurški fakultet
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Šljivić-Ivanović, Marija Z.
AU  - Smičiklas, Ivana D.
AU  - Jović, Mihajlo D.
AU  - Dimović, Slavko
AU  - Onjia, Antonije
PY  - 2018
UR  - http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3925
AB  - The use of soil additives for toxic metals chemical stabilization aims to decrease in situ the pollutants' mobility and availability. In this study, the effectiveness of rinsed red mud (RBRM) and annealed animal bones (B400) was compared in terms of Cu, Pb and Ni stabilization in two contaminated soils with contrasting properties Dystric Cambisol (CM dy) and Rendzic Leptosol (LP rz). The mobility of metals in unamended soil samples (control) and samples amended with 1% and 5% of selected additives were compared using sequential extraction protocol. The relative content of metals in readily and potentially available fractions was higher in CM dy (62% Pb, 13% Cu, and 31% Ni in exchangeable fraction) than in LP rz ( lt  5% of Pb, Cu, Ni in exchangeable fraction). In CM dy, both additives have caused a decrease in metal mobility with an increase of their doses. The effect of 5% sorbent addition was most pronounced related to Pb immobilization, provoking decrease of exchangeable Pb content to  lt  10%. Furthermore, B400 addition has redistributed investigated metals from the exchangeable to the residual phase more effectively than RBRM, and its effect on metal mobility decreased in the order Pb  gt  Cu  gt  Ni. Amending of LP rz soil had limited effects with no apparent decrease in exchangeable metal content. The effects of soil type variation, the type of additive and the additive dose onto metal mobility were compared according to ANOVA results. The content of readily and potentially available forms of metals was found to be (i) significantly correlated with all investigated variables for Pb, (ii) significantly correlated with soil type for Cu, and (iii) not in significant correlation with selected variables for Ni. Complex impacts of soil properties and treatment conditions on the mobility of co-contaminants emphasize the need for an individual approach to each case of contamination.
PB  - Springer International Publishing Ag, Cham
T2  - Water Air and Soil Pollution
T1  - Amendment Type and Dose Effects onto Coexisting Copper, Lead, and Nickel Ions Distribution in Soil
IS  - 10
VL  - 229
DO  - 10.1007/s11270-018-3981-0
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Šljivić-Ivanović, Marija Z. and Smičiklas, Ivana D. and Jović, Mihajlo D. and Dimović, Slavko and Onjia, Antonije",
year = "2018",
abstract = "The use of soil additives for toxic metals chemical stabilization aims to decrease in situ the pollutants' mobility and availability. In this study, the effectiveness of rinsed red mud (RBRM) and annealed animal bones (B400) was compared in terms of Cu, Pb and Ni stabilization in two contaminated soils with contrasting properties Dystric Cambisol (CM dy) and Rendzic Leptosol (LP rz). The mobility of metals in unamended soil samples (control) and samples amended with 1% and 5% of selected additives were compared using sequential extraction protocol. The relative content of metals in readily and potentially available fractions was higher in CM dy (62% Pb, 13% Cu, and 31% Ni in exchangeable fraction) than in LP rz ( lt  5% of Pb, Cu, Ni in exchangeable fraction). In CM dy, both additives have caused a decrease in metal mobility with an increase of their doses. The effect of 5% sorbent addition was most pronounced related to Pb immobilization, provoking decrease of exchangeable Pb content to  lt  10%. Furthermore, B400 addition has redistributed investigated metals from the exchangeable to the residual phase more effectively than RBRM, and its effect on metal mobility decreased in the order Pb  gt  Cu  gt  Ni. Amending of LP rz soil had limited effects with no apparent decrease in exchangeable metal content. The effects of soil type variation, the type of additive and the additive dose onto metal mobility were compared according to ANOVA results. The content of readily and potentially available forms of metals was found to be (i) significantly correlated with all investigated variables for Pb, (ii) significantly correlated with soil type for Cu, and (iii) not in significant correlation with selected variables for Ni. Complex impacts of soil properties and treatment conditions on the mobility of co-contaminants emphasize the need for an individual approach to each case of contamination.",
publisher = "Springer International Publishing Ag, Cham",
journal = "Water Air and Soil Pollution",
title = "Amendment Type and Dose Effects onto Coexisting Copper, Lead, and Nickel Ions Distribution in Soil",
number = "10",
volume = "229",
doi = "10.1007/s11270-018-3981-0"
}
Šljivić-Ivanović, M. Z., Smičiklas, I. D., Jović, M. D., Dimović, S.,& Onjia, A.. (2018). Amendment Type and Dose Effects onto Coexisting Copper, Lead, and Nickel Ions Distribution in Soil. in Water Air and Soil Pollution
Springer International Publishing Ag, Cham., 229(10).
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11270-018-3981-0
Šljivić-Ivanović MZ, Smičiklas ID, Jović MD, Dimović S, Onjia A. Amendment Type and Dose Effects onto Coexisting Copper, Lead, and Nickel Ions Distribution in Soil. in Water Air and Soil Pollution. 2018;229(10).
doi:10.1007/s11270-018-3981-0 .
Šljivić-Ivanović, Marija Z., Smičiklas, Ivana D., Jović, Mihajlo D., Dimović, Slavko, Onjia, Antonije, "Amendment Type and Dose Effects onto Coexisting Copper, Lead, and Nickel Ions Distribution in Soil" in Water Air and Soil Pollution, 229, no. 10 (2018),
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11270-018-3981-0 . .

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