Removal of toxic metals from vanadium-contaminated soils using a washing method: Reagent selection and parameter optimization

Jiang, J; Yang, M; Gao, Y; Wang, J; Li, D; Li, T

HERO ID

4667986

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2017

Language

English

PMID

28412486

HERO ID 4667986
In Press No
Year 2017
Title Removal of toxic metals from vanadium-contaminated soils using a washing method: Reagent selection and parameter optimization
Authors Jiang, J; Yang, M; Gao, Y; Wang, J; Li, D; Li, T
Journal Chemosphere
Volume 180
Page Numbers 295-301
Abstract Vanadium (V) contamination in soils is an increasing worldwide concern facing human health and environmental conservation. The fractionation of a metal influences its mobility and biological toxicity. We analyzed the fractionations of V and several other metals using the BCR three-step sequential extraction procedure. Among methods for removing metal contamination, soil washing is an effective permanent treatment. We conducted experiments to select the proper reagents and to optimize extraction conditions. Citric acid, tartaric acid, oxalic acid, and Na2EDTA all exhibited high removal rates of the extractable state of V. With a liquid-to-solid ratio of 10, washing with 0.4 mol/L citric acid, 0.4 mol/L tartaric acid, 0.4 mol/L oxalic acid, and 0.12 mol/L Na2EDTA led to removal rates of 91%, 88%, 88%, and 61%, respectively. The effect of multiple washing on removal rate was also explored. According to the changes observed in metal fractionations, differences in removal rates among reagents is likely associated with their pKa value, pH in solution, and chemical structure. We concluded that treating with appropriate washing reagents under optimal conditions can greatly enhance the remediation of vanadium-contaminated soils.
Doi 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2017.03.116
Pmid 28412486
Wosid WOS:000401880500035
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English