4.7 Article

Source tracing of potentially toxic elements in soils around a typical coking plant in an industrial area in northern China

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 807, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151091

Keywords

Potentially toxic elements; Soil; Pb isotopic; Source tracing; MixSIAR model

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFC1800306, 2019YFC1805805, 2017YFC0212701]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91644104]

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This study found that the concentration of mercury inside the coking plant and cadmium in the agricultural land around the plant were relatively high. The main sources of lead in the soil inside and outside the coking plant were found to be coal combustion. Pollution emission sources with significant influence on the soil outside the coking plant were diesel vehicles, gas tanks, and coke ovens. Inside the plant, pollution sources included quenching sections, atmospheric deposition, coke oven sections, and diesel vehicles.
Coking plants are a substantial source of potentially toxic elements (PTEs) in soil. In this study, we examined the concentration of PTEs, the soil physicochemical properties, and the Pb isotopes in the soil inside and around a coking plant in an industrial city in northern China. We analyzed the spatial distribution of PTEs and the pollution risk areas by Igeo index, the enrichment factor (EF), and the Nemerow index, and we quantitatively identified the contribution of PTE pollution sources in the soil on a small- and medium-scale (plant and work section). Our results indicated that the Hg concentration inside the plant and the Cd concentration in the agricultural land around the plant were both relatively high. A comprehensive analysis of the soil in the study area was performed using the positive matrix factorization model and Pb isotope (206/207Pb, 208/206Pb) tracing method, based on the MixSIAR model, this analysis indicated that burning coal was the main source of Pb both inside (46.8%) and outside (26.3%) the coking plant. The pollution emission sources with significant influence on the soil outside the coking plant were diesel vehicles (12.5%), gas tanks (12.4%), and coke ovens (11.5%), while the sources inside the plant were quenching sections (11.1%), atmospheric deposition (11.0%), coke oven sections (9.6%), and diesel vehicles (6.1%). The results of PTE pollution risk zoning and Pb isotope tracing indicated that pollution is more serious in the western part of the plant, which is the area where coking and gas production takes place, and the most serious pollution outside the plant is mainly distributed to the southeast. This study provides theoretical and practical data indicating the contribution of industrial enterprises to soil pollution, and will help identify pol-lution responsibility and the management of pollution sources. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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