4.7 Article

Influence of speciation distribution and particle size on heavy metal leaching from MSWI fly ash

期刊

WASTE MANAGEMENT
卷 138, 期 -, 页码 318-327

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.wasman.2021.12.008

关键词

MSWI fly ash; Particle size; Heavy metal leaching; Speciation

资金

  1. Italian Ministry for Education, University and Research, MIUR [PRIN 2017-2017L83S77]

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In this study, correlations between heavy metal content, particle size, speciation distribution, and water leaching in fly ash from municipal solid waste incineration were investigated. The results showed that heavy metal leaching is strongly related to speciation distribution and surface complexation on Al/Fe (hydr)oxide. The study also suggests that differences in speciation distribution, rather than heavy metal content or particle size, govern leaching potential in MSWI-FA.
Fly ash from municipal solid waste incineration (MSWI-FA) contains leachable heavy metals. In the present study the correlations between heavy metal content, particle size, speciation distribution with respect to water leaching are investigated, using a combination of solid-state bulk analytical techniques, leaching treatments, sequential extractions and thermodynamic geochemical modelling. Among the analyzed heavy metals, Zn and Pb are the most abundant in any grain size class, followed by Cu, Cr, Cd and Ni, with concentration that tends to increase with a decrease of the grain size. The phase composition is constituted of salt (halite, sylvite, anhydrite and syngenite), which provide the main minerals regardless of the particle size class; calcite, quartz and gehlenite occur in comparatively lower amounts, while 50% wt is composed of amorphous fraction. Heavy metal leaching is strongly correlated to speciation distribution, and in particular to the fraction (F1) associated with salt, carbonate and weak surface sorption. Leaching from speciation due to surface complexation on Al/Fe (hydr)oxide becomes relevant at acidic regime. Particle size and heavy metal content, in turn, moderately correlate with leaching. The F1-speciation as a function of particle size does not exhibit a definite trend shared by all heavy metals under investigation. This suggests that i) differences in speciation distribution, rather than bare heavy metal content or particle size, govern leaching from MSWI-FA; ii) F1 can be regarded as a marker of the potential heavy metal leaching; iii) a comparatively modest efficiency in managing MSWI-FA is expected from grain size separation strategies.

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