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Chemical speciation and phytoavailability of Zn, Cu, Ni and Cd in soil amended with fly ash-stabilized sewage sludge.
Environ Int. 2004 Jan; 29(7):895-900.EI

Abstract

A sequential extraction method was used to determine chemical forms of Cu, Zn, Ni and Cd in fly ash-stabilized sludge. A loamy acid soil amended with fly ash-stabilized sludge was used to grow corn under greenhouse conditions. Sewage sludge amended with coal fly ash can reduce the availability of Cu, Zn, Ni and Cd in the sludge. Increasing fly ash amendment rate significantly reduced DTPA-extractable Cu, Zn, Ni and Cd concentrations. Percentages of Cu, Zn and Ni in residual fraction increased with an increase in fly ash amendment rates. Majority of Cu was associated with organic form, but Zn and Ni were associated with Fe-Mn oxide and residual forms. Addition of ash-amended sludge to soil significantly increased dry mass of corn. With coal fly ash amendment rate increasing, concentrations of Zn and Cu in shoot tissues of corn decreased significantly, but concentrations of Cd and Ni did not change significantly. Significant correlations were found between concentrations of Cu and Zn in corn shoot and oxide and total Cu fractions, and all chemical fractions of Zn in fly ash-stabilized sludge, respectively. Hence, ash amendment significantly reduced the availability of heavy metals by chemical modification of their chemical speciation into less available forms.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Plant Nutrition, China Agricultural University, 100094 Beijing, PR China.No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

14592566

Citation

Su, D C., and J W C. Wong. "Chemical Speciation and Phytoavailability of Zn, Cu, Ni and Cd in Soil Amended With Fly Ash-stabilized Sewage Sludge." Environment International, vol. 29, no. 7, 2004, pp. 895-900.
Su DC, Wong JW. Chemical speciation and phytoavailability of Zn, Cu, Ni and Cd in soil amended with fly ash-stabilized sewage sludge. Environ Int. 2004;29(7):895-900.
Su, D. C., & Wong, J. W. (2004). Chemical speciation and phytoavailability of Zn, Cu, Ni and Cd in soil amended with fly ash-stabilized sewage sludge. Environment International, 29(7), 895-900.
Su DC, Wong JW. Chemical Speciation and Phytoavailability of Zn, Cu, Ni and Cd in Soil Amended With Fly Ash-stabilized Sewage Sludge. Environ Int. 2004;29(7):895-900. PubMed PMID: 14592566.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Chemical speciation and phytoavailability of Zn, Cu, Ni and Cd in soil amended with fly ash-stabilized sewage sludge. AU - Su,D C, AU - Wong,J W C, PY - 2003/11/1/pubmed PY - 2004/4/23/medline PY - 2003/11/1/entrez SP - 895 EP - 900 JF - Environment international JO - Environ Int VL - 29 IS - 7 N2 - A sequential extraction method was used to determine chemical forms of Cu, Zn, Ni and Cd in fly ash-stabilized sludge. A loamy acid soil amended with fly ash-stabilized sludge was used to grow corn under greenhouse conditions. Sewage sludge amended with coal fly ash can reduce the availability of Cu, Zn, Ni and Cd in the sludge. Increasing fly ash amendment rate significantly reduced DTPA-extractable Cu, Zn, Ni and Cd concentrations. Percentages of Cu, Zn and Ni in residual fraction increased with an increase in fly ash amendment rates. Majority of Cu was associated with organic form, but Zn and Ni were associated with Fe-Mn oxide and residual forms. Addition of ash-amended sludge to soil significantly increased dry mass of corn. With coal fly ash amendment rate increasing, concentrations of Zn and Cu in shoot tissues of corn decreased significantly, but concentrations of Cd and Ni did not change significantly. Significant correlations were found between concentrations of Cu and Zn in corn shoot and oxide and total Cu fractions, and all chemical fractions of Zn in fly ash-stabilized sludge, respectively. Hence, ash amendment significantly reduced the availability of heavy metals by chemical modification of their chemical speciation into less available forms. SN - 0160-4120 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/14592566/Chemical_speciation_and_phytoavailability_of_Zn_Cu_Ni_and_Cd_in_soil_amended_with_fly_ash_stabilized_sewage_sludge_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -