4.5 Article

Contaminated soil amendment by diatomite: chemical fractions of zinc, lead, copper and cadmium

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13762-020-02872-0

Keywords

Immobilization; Low-cost amendment; Mobility factor; Stability index; Sequential extraction

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The study found that the application of natural diatomite significantly reduced the exchangeable metal fractions in soil and increased the residual fractions, indicating that diatomite has a good effect in immobilizing heavy metals.
High concentration of labile metals in soil directly affects soil quality, water health and human safety. Decreasing mobility of metals, especially in contaminated soils, by cost-effective amendments may alleviate environmental problems. Natural diatomite was investigated to immobilize toxic elements of zinc, lead, copper and cadmium in a contaminated calcareous soil. The diatomite was characterized using X-ray fluorescence spectrometry and scanning electron microscopy. Contaminated soil was incubated with 0, 2 and 5 weight -% of diatomite at 25 degrees C for 8 weeks. Tessier sequential extraction method was also used as a suitable method for identification of chemical forms of heavy metals; metal stability index and mobility factor were calculated. Results showed that application of diatomite in soil significantly decreased the metals in the exchangeable fraction and increased them in the residual fraction. The exchangeable metal fractions decreased by 66-88%, and residual fractions increased by 18-94% in the 5 weight -% of diatomite treatment after 8-week incubation. With an increase in the amount of diatomite applied and the incubation time, metal mobility factor values significantly decreased and soil pH values increased. Application of diatomite caused the heavy metals redistribution toward more stable forms and leads to an increase in stability index values. In conclusion, in situ immobilization of heavy metals by application of diatomite, as a low-cost amendment, had a significant potential to stabilize metals in the contaminated calcareous soil.

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