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1.
This study determined Cd speciation and release kinetics in a Cd-Zn cocontaminated alkaline paddy soil, under various flooding periods and draining conditions, by employing synchrotron-based techniques, and a stirred-flow kinetic method. Results revealed that varying flooding periods and draining conditions affected Cd speciation and its release kinetics. Linear least-squares fitting (LLSF) of bulk X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectra of the air-dried, and the 1 day-flooded soil samples, showed that at least 50% of Cd was bound to humic acid. Cadmium carbonates were found as the major species at most flooding periods, while a small amount of cadmium sulfide was found after the soils were flooded for longer periods. Under all flooding and draining conditions, at least 14 mg/kg Cd was desorbed from the soil after a 2-hour desorption experiment. The results obtained by micro X-ray fluorescence (μ-XRF) spectroscopy showed that Cd was less associated with Zn than Ca, in most soil samples. Therefore, it is more likely that Cd and Ca will be present in the same mineral phases rather than Cd and Zn, although the source of these two latter elements may originate from the same surrounding Zn mines in the Mae Sot district.  相似文献   

2.
The long-term speciation of Zn in contaminated soils is strongly influenced by soil pH, clay, and organic matter content as well as Zn loading. In addition, the type of Zn-bearing contaminant entering the soil may influence the subsequent formation of pedogenic Zn species, but systematic studies on such effects are currently lacking. We therefore conducted a soil incubation study in which four soils, ranging from strongly acidic to calcareous, were spiked with 2000 mg/kg Zn using either ZnO (zincite) or ZnS (sphalerite) as the contamination source. The soils were incubated under aerated conditions in moist state for up to four years. The extractability and speciation of Zn were assessed after one, two, and four years using extractions with 0.01 M CaCl(2) and Zn K-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy, respectively. After four years, more than 90% of the added ZnO were dissolved in all soils, with the fastest dissolution occurring in the acidic soils. Contamination with ZnO favored the formation of Zn-bearing layered double hydroxides (LDH), even in acidic soils, and to a lesser degree Zn-phyllosilicates and adsorbed Zn species. This was explained by locally elevated pH and high Zn concentrations around dissolving ZnO particles. Except for the calcareous soil, ZnS dissolved more slowly than ZnO, reaching only 26 to 75% of the added ZnS after four years. ZnS dissolved more slowly in the two acidic soils than in the near-neutral and the calcareous soil. Also, the resulting Zn speciation was markedly different between these two pairs of soils: Whereas Zn bound to hydroxy-interlayered clay minerals (HIM) and octahedrally coordinated Zn sorption complexes prevailed in the two acidic soils, Zn speciation in the neutral and the calcareous soil was dominated by Zn-LDH and tetrahedrally coordinated inner-sphere Zn complexes. Our results show that the type of Zn-bearing contaminant phase can have a significant influence on the formation of pedogenic Zn species in soils. Important factors include the rate of Zn release from the contaminant phases and effects of the contaminant phase on bulk soil properties and on local chemical conditions around weathering contaminant particles.  相似文献   

3.
The cycling of common sorbents such as metal (hydr)- oxides, carbonates, and sulfides in redox-active environments influences the partitioning of associated trace elements such as zinc. Consequently, fluctuations in redox status may in part determine the availability and mobility of Zn and other trace elements. This research examines changes in Zn speciation in a contaminated wetland soil that undergoes seasonal flooding. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) was employed to identify and quantify Zn species from soil cores collected over a 1-year cycle as a function of water depth, location, and soil depth. Zinc associated with (hydr)oxide phases in dry, oxidized soils and with sulfides and carbonates in flooded systems. An increase in water level was accompanied by a reversible change in Zn fractionation toward ZnS and ZnC03. However, a small, recalcitrant fraction of Zn associated with (hydr)oxides remained even when the soils were exposed to highly reducing conditions. Water depth and redox potential were the most important factors in determining Zn speciation, although spatial variation was also important. These data indicate that zinc sorption is a dynamic process influenced by environmental changes.  相似文献   

4.
The kinetics of Ni sorption to two Delaware agricultural soils were studied to quantitatively assess the relative importance of Ni adsorption on soil organic matter (SOM) and the formation of Ni layered double hydroxide (Ni-LDH) precipitates using both experimental studies and kinetic modeling. Batch sorption kinetic experiments were conducted with both soils at pH 6.0, 7.0, and 7.5 from 24 h up to 1 month. Time-resolved Ni speciation in soils was determined by X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) during the kinetic experiments. A kinetics model was developed to describe Ni kinetic reactions under various reaction conditions and time scales, which integrated Ni adsorption on SOM with Ni-LDH precipitation in soils. The soil Ni speciation (adsorbed phases and Ni-LDH) calculated using the kinetics model was consistent with that obtained through XAS analysis during the sorption processes. Under our experimental conditions, both modeling and XAS results demonstrated that Ni adsorption on SOM was dominant in the short term and the formation of Ni-LDH precipitates accounted for the long-term Ni sequestration in soils, and, more interestingly, that the adsorbed Ni may slowly transfer to Ni-LDH phases with longer reaction times.  相似文献   

5.
Recent studies on the speciation of Zn in contaminated soils confirmed the formation of Zn-layered double hydroxide (LDH) and Zn-phyllosilicate phases. However, no information on the kinetics of the formation of those phases under field conditions is currently available. In the present study, the transformation of Zn in a field soil artificially contaminated with ZnO containing filter dust from a brass foundry was monitored during 4 years using extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy. Soil sections were studied by micro-X-ray fluorescence (micro-XRF) and micro-EXAFS spectroscopy. EXAFS spectra were analyzed by principal component analysis (PCA) and linear combination fitting (LCF). The results show that ZnO dissolved within 9 months and that half of the total Zn reprecipitated. The precipitate was mainly of the Zn-LDH type (>75%). Only a minor fraction (<25%) may be of Zn-phyllosilicate type. The remaining Zn was adsorbed to soil organic and inorganic particles. No significant changes in Zn speciation occurred from 9 to 47 months after the contamination. Thermodynamic calculations show that both Zn-LDH and Zn-phyllosilicate may form in the presence of ZnO but that the formation of Zn-phyllosilicate would be thermodynamically favored. Thus, the dominance of Zn-LDH found by spectroscopy suggests that the formation of the Zn precipitates was not solely controlled bythermodynamics but also contained a kinetic component. The rate-limiting step could be the supply of Al and Si from soil minerals to the Zn-rich solutions around dissolving ZnO grains.  相似文献   

6.
In Bangladesh, irrigation of dry season rice (boro) with arsenic-contaminated groundwater is leading to increased As levels in soils and rice, and to concerns about As-induced yield reduction. Arsenic concentrations and speciation in soil porewater are strongly influenced by redox conditions, and thus by water management during rice growth. We studied the dynamics of As, Fe, P, Si, and other elements in porewater of a paddy field near Sreenagar (Munshiganj), irrigated according to local practice, in which flooding was intermittent. During early rice growth, As porewater concentrations reached up to 500 μg L(-1) and were dominated by As(III), but As release was constrained to the lower portion of the soil above the plow pan. In the later part of the season, soil conditions were oxic throughout the depth range relevant to rice roots and porewater concentrations only intermittently increased to ~150 μg L(-1) As(V) following irrigation events. Our findings suggest that intermittent irrigation, currently advocated in Bangladesh for water-saving purposes, may be a promising means of reducing As input to paddy soils and rice plant exposure to As.  相似文献   

7.
Foods produced on soils impacted by antimony (Sb) mining activities are a potential health risk due to plant uptake of the contaminant metalloids (Sb) and arsenic (As). Here we report for the first time the chemical speciation of Sb in soil and porewater of flooded paddy soil, impacted by active Sb mining, and its effect on uptake and speciation in rice plants (Oryza sativa L. cv Jiahua). Results are compared with behavior and uptake of As. Pot experiments were conducted under controlled conditions in a climate chamber over a period of 50 days. In pots without rice plants, flooding increased both the concentration of dissolved Sb (up to ca. 2000 μg L(-1)) and As (up to ca. 1500 μg L(-1)). When rice was present, Fe plaque developing on rice roots acted as a scavenger for both As and Sb, whereby the concentration of As, but not Sb, in porewater decreased substantially. Dissolved Sb in porewater, which occurred mainly as Sb(V), correlated with Ca, indicating a solubility governed by Ca antimonate. No significant differences in bioaccumulation factor and translocation factor between Sb and As were observed. Greater relative concentration of Sb(V) was found in rice shoots compared to rice root and porewater, indicating either a preferred uptake of Sb(V) or possibly an oxidation of Sb(III) to Sb(V) in shoots. Adding soil amendments (olivine, hematite) to the paddy soil had no effect on Sb and As concentrations in porewater.  相似文献   

8.
Soils are biogeochemical systems under continual modification by biological and chemical processes. Trace element solid-solution partitioning is thus influenced by long-term changes to these solid phases. We study Pb, Cd, Zn, and Cu solution speciation and solid-phase dynamics in two soils of volcanic origin (Te Akatea and Egmont, high in noncrystalline aluminosilicates), an oxisol from Brazil (Oxisol, high in oxides of Al and Fe), and several sludge-treated soils (labeled NYS soils, high in organic materials). Total soluble (by ICP) and labile (by ASV) concentrations of Pb, Cd, Zn, and Cu were determined after incubation of the soils for about 1.5 yr at room (23 degrees C) and elevated (70 degrees C) temperatures. Changes occurring to the solid phases were monitored by FTIR and extraction with oxalate and pyrophosphate. It is shown that induced hydrolysis or decomposition of organic materials in soils results in increases in both labile and total soluble concentrations of Pb, Cd, Cu, and Zn in solution. Labile and total soluble concentrations of Cu and Zn increase concomitantly with dissolved organic carbon (DOC); the nonlabile soluble fraction also increases with increasing DOC. Similarly, the concentration of Cd and Pb in solution increases with increasing DOC; however, most soluble Cd and Pb is asv-labile. Only in the Egmont soil (mineralogy dominated by proto-imogolite allophane) was reduced Pb solubility observed after prolonged equilibration and heating. Lead solubility increased after partial crystallization of amorphous minerals in the Te Akatea and the Oxisol. Thus, for most of the metal-soil systems studied, prolonged thermal treatment at 70 degrees C increased total soluble and asv-labile metals, suggesting that aging effects on metals in contaminated soils could release metals to labile forms in some cases.  相似文献   

9.
Modeling kinetics of Cu and Zn release from soils   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Kinetics of Cu and Zn release from soil particles was studied using two surface soils with a stirred-flow method. Different solution pH, dissolved organic matter (DOM) concentrations, and flow rates were tested in this study. A model for kinetics controlled sorption/desorption reactions between soils and solutions was globally fit to all experimental data simultaneously. Results were compared to a model that assumes local instantaneous equilibrium. We obtained one unique set of model parameters applicable to different pH, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), and flow conditions. We included DOM complexation of copper ions, which decreased their sorption. The effect of pH was included by assuming proton competition with metal ions for binding sites on soil particles. These results provide the basis for developing predictive models for metal release from soil particles to surface waters and soil solution.  相似文献   

10.
A novel model has been developed to describe the kinetics of Zn adsorption and desorption to soils. The model incorporates the mechanistic-based equilibrium model WHAM (Windermere humic aqueous model) to account for the chemical variation during the reaction (e.g., pH and Zn2+ concentration), the heterogeneity of binding sites of soil organic matter (SOM), and the nonlinear binding of Zn to SOM. To test the model, kinetic experiments were conducted using a stirred-flow method. Six soils, with low clay fractions and covering a wide range in SOM concentrations, and various Zn concentrations and pHs were studied. Under these experimental conditions, SOM is found to be the major adsorbent for Zn binding. The fast and slow Zn reactions with soils were associated, respectively, with the monodentate and bidentate binding sites of humic substances in WHAM. The model has only three fitting parameters, the two desorption rate coefficients for the fast (monodentate) and slow (bidentate) reaction sites which are constant and independent of soil type, and the reactive organic matter fraction of the total SOM in each soil. All other parameters are derived from WHAM. The model is able to predict Zn release from spiked soils including the effects of Ca competition.  相似文献   

11.
We have developed an approach to isolate mechanisms controlling mobility and speciation of As in soil-water systems. The approach uses a combination of isotopic exchange and chromatographic/mass spectrometric As speciation techniques. We used this approach to identify mechanisms responsible for changes in the concentration of soluble As in two contaminated soils (Eaglehawk and Tavistock) subjected to different redox conditions and microbial activity. A high proportion of the total As in both soils was present in a nonlabile form. Incubation of the soils under anaerobic conditions led to changes in the concentration of soluble As in each soil but did not change the As speciation or the proportion of total As in labile forms in the soils. Hence, a decrease in soluble As in the Eaglehawk soil was the result of an Eh-induced pH decrease, enhancing the solid-phase sorption of As(V). An increase in soluble As in the Tavistock soil was due to an Eh-induced pH increase, decreasing solid-phase sorption of As(V). Incubation of the soils under aerobic conditions with microbial activity stimulated by addition of glucose resulted in no change in the solution concentration or speciation of As in the Eaglehawk soil, but led to a large increase in the concentration of soluble As in the Tavistock soil. This increase was due to conversion of exchangeable forms of As(V) into less strongly sorbed As(III) species. Incubation under anaerobic conditions in the presence of glucose resulted in a large increase in the concentration of soluble As in both soils; however, different mechanisms were found to be responsible for the increase in each soil. In the Eaglehawk soil higher concentrations of As were again due to conversion of exchangeable forms of As(V) into less strongly sorbed As(III) species. In contrast in the Tavistock soil, the increased As in solution was the result of release of As(V) from the large reservoir of nonlabile soil As.  相似文献   

12.
Arsenic-rich groundwater from shallow tube wells is widely used for the irrigation of boro rice in Bangladesh and West Bengal. In the long term this may lead to the accumulation of As in paddy soils and potentially have adverse effects on rice yield and quality. In the companion article in this issue, we have shown that As input into paddy fields with irrigation water is laterally heterogeneous. To assess the potential for As accumulation in soil, we investigated the lateral and vertical distribution of As in rice field soils near Sreenagar (Munshiganj, Bangladesh) and its changes over a 1 year cycle of irrigation and monsoon flooding. At the study site, 18 paddy fields are irrigated with water from a shallow tube well containing 397 +/- 7 microg L(-1) As. The analysis of soil samples collected before irrigation in December 2004 showed that soil As concentrations in paddy fields did not depend on the length of the irrigation channel between well and field inlet. Within individual fields, however, soil As contents decreased with increasing distance to the water inlet, leading to highly variable topsoil As contents (11-35 mg kg(-1), 0-10 cm). Soil As contents after irrigation (May 2005) showed that most As input occurred close to the water inlet and that most As was retained in the top few centimeters of soil. After monsoon flooding (December 2005), topsoil As contents were again close to levels measured before irrigation. Thus, As input during irrigation was at least partly counteracted by As mobilization during monsoon flooding. However, the persisting lateral As distribution suggests net arsenic accumulation over the past 15 years. More pronounced As accumulation may occur in regions with several rice crops per year, less intense monsoon flooding, or different irrigation schemes. The high lateral and vertical heterogeneity of soil As contents must be taken into account in future studies related to As accumulation in paddy soils and potential As transfer into rice.  相似文献   

13.
Arsenic bioavailability to rice is elevated in Bangladeshi paddy soils   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Some paddy soils in the Bengal delta are contaminated with arsenic (As) due to irrigation of As-laden groundwater, which may lead to yield losses and elevated As transfer to the food chain. Whether these soils have a higher As bioavailability than other soils containing either geogenic As or contaminated by mining activities was investigated in a pot experiment. Fourteen soils varying in the source and the degree (4-138 mg As kg 1?1) of As contamination were collected, 10 from Bangladeshi paddy fields (contaminated by irrigation water) and two each from China and the UK (geogenic or mining impacted), for comparison. Bangladeshi soils had higher percentages of the total As extractable by ammonium phosphate (specifically sorbed As) than other soils and also released more As into the porewater upon flooding. Porewater As concentrations increased with increasing soil As concentrations more steeply in Bangladeshi soils, with arsenite being the dominant As species. Rice growth and grain yield decreased markedly in Bangladeshi soils containing > 13 mg As kg 1?1, but not in the other soils. Phosphate-extractable or porewater As was a better indicator of As bioavailability than total soil As. Rice straw As concentrations increased with increasing soil As concentrations; however, As phytotoxicity appeared to result in lower grain As concentrations. The relative proportions of inorganic As and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA) in grain varied among soils, and the percentage DMA was larger in greenhouse-grown plants than grain samples collected from the paddy fields of the same soil and the same rice cultivar, indicating a strong environmental influence on As species found in rice grain. This study shows that Bangladeshi paddy soils contaminated by irrigation had a higher As bioavailability than other soils, resulting in As phytotoxicity in rice and substantial yield losses.  相似文献   

14.
Selective sequential extractions (SSE) and, more recently, X-ray absorption fine-structure IXAFS) spectroscopy have been used to characterize the speciation of metal contaminants in soils and sediments. However, both methods have specific limitations when multiple metal species coexist in soils and sediments. In this study, we tested a combined approach, in which XAFS spectra were collected after each of 6 SSE steps, and then analyzed by multishell fitting, principal component analysis (PCA) and linear combination fits (LCF), to determine the Zn speciation in a smelter-contaminated, strongly acidic soil. In the topsoil, Zn was predominately found in the smelter-emitted minerals franklinite (60%) and sphalerite (30%) and as aqueous or outer-sphere Zn2+ (10%). In the subsoil, aqueous or outer-sphere Zn2+ prevailed (55%), but 45% of Zn was incorporated by hydroxy-Al interlayers of phyllosilicates. Formation of such Zn-bearing hydroxy-interlayers, which has been observed here for the first time, may be an important mechanism to reduce the solubility of Zn in those soils, which are too acidic to retain Zn by formation of inner-sphere sorption complexes, layered double hydroxides or phyllosilicates. The stepwise removal of Zn fractions by SSE significantly improved the identification of species by XAFS and PCA and their subsequent quantification by LCF. While SSE alone provided excellent estimates of the amount of mobile Zn species, it failed to identify and quantify Zn associated with mineral phases because of nonspecific dissolution and the precipitation of Zn oxalate. The systematic combination of chemical extraction, spectroscopy, and advanced statistical analysis allowed us to identify and quantify both mobile and recalcitrant species with high reliability and precision.  相似文献   

15.
Zinc coordination to multiple ligand atoms in organic-rich surface soils   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We report on the solid-phase speciation of naturally occurring Zn in metalliferous organic-matter-rich surface soils. Synchrotron-based studies were used to probe elemental distribution and associations in soil particles (micro-XRF) together with the mineralogy (micro-XRD) and Zn bonding environment (Zn-micro-XANES) at the micrometer-scale level. The average bonding environment of Zn was also probed for bulk soils using XANES. We found the distribution of elements within soil particles to be heterogeneous; however, some elements are consistently co-located. While conventional XRD analyses of whole soils did not identify any Zn mineral phase, synchrotron-based-micro-XRD analyses indicated that sphalerite (ZnS) is present in a particle from a wetland soil (soil labeled G3). Linear combination fit (LCF) analyses of XANES spectra collected for bulk soils (Zn-XANES) and microm-regions (Zn-micro-XANES) within soil particles suggest Zn bonds to oxygen-, nitrogen-, and sulfur-functional groups in these sulfur-, nitrogen-, and zinc-rich organic surface soils. The XANES spectra of all bulk soils and of all microm-regions except for the wetland soil (G3), where ZnS was the most significant constituent, were best fitted by the Zn-arginine reference compound and therefore seems to indicate Zn bonding to nitrogen. Thus, these results provide compelling evidence of the formation of highly covalent Zn-organic bonds in the organic-rich surface soils that were studied. This may explain in part why metal partition coefficients (Kd) are generally higher in organic soils, and why the toxic thresholds for total metal concentrations are higher in organic than in mineral soils.  相似文献   

16.
Effective concentrations (CE) of Zn measured by the technique of DGT (diffusive gradients in thin films) were compared, along with total concentrations of Zn and the concentrations of Zn in soil solutions, to Zn concentrations in plants. Soils variously contaminated with Zn were collected in the vicinity of two galvanized electrical transmission towers (pylons) and two motorway crash barriers. Lepidium sativum was grown in each soil and in corresponding control soils amended with ZnCl2 to similar total Zn concentrations. CE, concentrations in soil solution, and total Zn were measured in all soils, and total Zn was measured in the plant shoots. The CE values, soil solution Zn, and shoot Zn concentrations were all larger in ZnCl2 amended soils than in field contaminated soils at corresponding total Zn. Correlations between the concentration of Zn in the plants and the measured soil parameter followed the order CE > soil solution > total Zn. The low scatter in the plot of log plant concentration versus log CE revealed a relationship with two distinct features. Plant Zn was between 100 and 300 mg/kg up to an effective Zn concentration of about 2 mg/L, above which plant Zn increased steadily with increasing CE. Use of a dynamic model to interpret the DGT measurement suggests that the intrinsic rate of release of Zn from solid phase to solution, expressed as a rate constant, is much higher for soils that receive fresh supplies of Zn. This finding provides a mechanistic basis for reconciling laboratory experiments, where metal is freshly amended, to data obtained in the field. The potential of DGT as a surrogate for metal availability to plants is further confirmed by this work.  相似文献   

17.
The stability and the formation and dissolution kinetics of mixed trace metal precipitates in soils are currently unknown. The objective of this study was to investigate slow sorption and release processes of Zn and Ni in a loamy soil using a combination of soil column experiments and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy. To investigate slow sorption processes, the soil material was packed into columns and leached with 5400 pore volumes of 10(-2) M CaCl2 solutions containing either ZnCl2 (5.2 x 10(-5) M) or NiCl2 (5.2 x 10(-5) M) or both ZnCl2 and NiCl2 (5.2 x 10(-5) M each). The Zn and Ni concentrations in the column effluents were monitored. The metal breakthrough curves showed that slow sorption processes lead to metal retention, whereby Zn was more strongly retained than Ni. In the experiment with both Zn and Ni present, amounts of Zn and Ni similar to those in the experiments with either Zn or Ni alone were retained. Analysis of soil samples by EXAFS spectroscopy showed that layered double hydroxide (LDH)-type precipitates had formed in all columns and that a mixed ZnNi-LDH had formed in the presence of both Zn and Ni. The dissolution of those precipitates under acidic conditions was assessed by subsequent leaching of the columns with a 10(-2) M CaCl2 solution at pH 3.0 (approximately 3000 pore volumes). When only Zn was present, 95% of the retained Zn was leached at pH 3. In contrast, only 23% of the retained Ni was leached in experiments with Ni alone. When Zn and Ni were present, 90% of the retained Zn and 87% of the retained Ni were released upon acidification. EXAFS analysis revealed that the LDH phases in the Zn experiment and the Zn-Ni experiment had been completely dissolved, while the LDH phase formed in the Ni experiment was still present. The higher resistance of Ni-LDH against dissolution at low pH could also be shown in dissolution studies with synthetic Zn-LDH, Ni-LDH, and ZnNi-LDH. Our results suggest that the individual rates at which Zn and Ni cations enter into the LDH structure determine the composition of the mixed ZnNi-LDH precipitate, and that the LDH composition determines the rate at which the LDH phase dissolves under acidic conditions.  相似文献   

18.
The inhibitory effect of Zn on the nitrification process in ZnCl2 spiked soils (12 soils, pH range 4.8-7.5) was compared to toxic effects of Zn on the nitrification by Nitrosospira sp. in soilless solutions with varying pH (pH 6-8) and ionic composition. The nitrification was reduced by 20% at Zn solution concentrations (EC20) ranging between 7 and 1200 microM Zn in the soil pore water and between 5 and 150 microM Zn in the soilless solutions. Protective effects of H+, Ca2+, and Mg2+ against Zn2+ toxicity were observed in both systems. Zinc speciation was determined, and 60-90% of the Zn in the soils and 35-80% of the Zn in the soilless solutions was present as Zn2+. A biotic ligand model and a Freundlich-type model, incorporating the competition of Zn2+ ions with H+, Ca2+, and Mg2+ for binding on the biotic ligands, were used to model the results. The Zn2+ activities resulting in 20% reduction of the nitrification were well predicted using the same parameters for both (soil and soilless) systems, indicating that microorganisms in soil are exposed to zinc through the free zinc ion in soil pore water.  相似文献   

19.
Arsenic (As) contamination of paddy soils threatens rice cultivation and the health of populations relying on rice as a staple crop. In the present study, isotopic dilution techniques were used to determine the chemically labile (E value) and phytoavailable (L value) pools of As in a range of paddy soils from Bangladesh, India, and China and two arable soils from the UK varying in the degree and sources of As contamination. The E value accounted for 6.2-21.4% of the total As, suggesting that a large proportion of soil As is chemically nonlabile. L values measured with rice grown under anaerobic conditions were generally larger than those under aerobic conditions, indicating increased potentially phytoavailable pool of As in flooded soils. In an incubation study, As was mobilized into soil pore water mainly as arsenite under flooded conditions, with Bangladeshi soils contaminated by irrigation of groundwater showing a greater potential of As mobilization than other soils. Arsenic mobilization was best predicted by phosphate-extractable As in the soils.  相似文献   

20.
Knowledge of trace metal speciation in soil pore waters is important in addressing metal bioavailability and risk assessment of contaminated soils. Numerous analytical methods have been utilized for determining trace metal speciation in aqueous environmental matrixes; however, most of these methods suffer from significant interferences. The Donnan dialysis membrane technique minimizes these interferences and has been used in this study to determine free Zn2+, Cd2+, Cu2+, and Pb2+ activities in pore waters from 15 agricultural and 12 long-term contaminated soils. The soils vary widely in their origin, pH, organic carbon content, and total metal concentrations. Pore water pM2+ activities also covered a wide range and were controlled by soil pH and total metal concentrations. For the agricultural soils, most of the free metal activities were below detection limit, apart from Zn2+ for which the fraction of free Zn2+ in soluble Zn ranged from 2.3 to 87% (mean 43%). Five of the agricultural soils had detectable free Cd2+ with fractions of free metal ranging from 59 to 102% (mean 75%). For the contaminated soils with detectable free metal concentrations, the fraction of free metal as a percentage of soluble metal varied from 9.9 to 97% (mean 50%) for Zn2+, from 22 to 86% (mean 49%) for Cd2+, from 0.4 to 32.1% (mean 5%) for Cu2+, and from 2.9 to 48.8% (mean 20.1%) for Pb2+. For the contaminated soils, the equilibrium speciation programs GEOCHEM and WHAM Model VI provided reasonable estimates of free Zn2+ fractions in comparison to the measured fractions (R2 approximately 0.7), while estimates of free Cd2+ fractions were less agreeable (R2 approximately 0.5). The models generally predicted stronger binding of Cu2+ to DOC and hence lower fractions of free Cu2+ as compared with the observed fractions. The binding of Cu2+ and Pb2+ to DOC predicted by WHAM Model VI was much strongerthan that predicted by GEOCHEM.  相似文献   

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