4.7 Article

Short-term experiment for the in situ stabilization of a polluted soil using mining and biomass waste

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 296, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113179

Keywords

Soil remediation; Circular economy; Nature-based solutions; Mining waste; Arsenic; Metals

Funding

  1. research project NANOBIOWASH (AEI/FEDER, UE) [CTM2016-75894-P]
  2. Environmental Assay Unit of the Scientific and Technical Services of the University of Oviedo

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The study used mining waste and biomass waste to remediate contaminated soil, finding that the sole application of mining waste can immobilize metals but inhibit plant growth, while combining it with sludge compost rich in nitrogen and phosphorus yields better results. Biochar can reduce metal availability, but inhibits plant growth.
Mining and biomass waste were used to remediate a brownfield affected by As, Cd, Cu, Pb and Zn pollution in a pilot scale experiment, and a plant used for phytoremediation purposes was used as an indicator of possible toxicological effects. To carry out the experiments, plots in field conditions were treated with magnesite (mining waste), magnesite-sludge compost, and magnesite-biochar respectively, while untreated soil was used as a control. The plots were then irrigated and left for one week, after which seeds of the ryegrass Lolium perenne L. were sown. Soil properties such as metal(loid) availability, pH, phosphorus availability, total nitrogen, organic carbon, and nutrients were monitored for two months. Finally, the ryegrass was harvested and pollutant concentrations were analyzed in the aerial parts. Magnesite proved to be an excellent amendment for metal(loid) immobilization, although the notable increase in soil pH and Mg content inhibited plant growth. However, the application of magnesite in combination with the sludge compost (rich in N and P) favored plant growth and also immobilized metals, although As availability increased. In contrast, the analysis of plants in this treatment revealed lower As and metal concentrations than those grown in the untreated soil. In turn, the application of magnesite and biochar was also effective in reducing metal(loid) availability; however, the plants did not grow under these conditions, probably due to the low N and P content of biochar. In this regard, the combined application of mining waste and sludge compost emerges as a useful nature-based solution for soil remediation in the context of the circular economy.

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