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In situ stabilization of cadmium-, lead-, and zinc-contaminated soil using various amendments.
Chemosphere. 2009 Nov; 77(8):1069-75.C

Abstract

Chemical stabilization is an in situ remediation method that uses inexpensive amendments to reduce contaminant availability in polluted soil. We tested the effects of several amendments (limestone, red-mud, and furnace slag) on the extractability of heavy metals, microbial activities, phytoavailability of soil metals (assessed using lettuce, Lactuca sativa L.), and availability of heavy metals in ingested soil to the human gastrointestinal system (assessed using the physiologically based extraction test). The application of soil amendments significantly decreased the amount of soluble and extractable heavy metals in the soil (p<0.05). The decreased extractable metal content of soil was accompanied by increased microbial activity and decreased plant uptake of heavy metals. Soil microbial activities (soil respiration, urease, and dehydrogenase activity) significantly increased in limestone and red-mud-amended soils. Red-mud was the most effective treatment in decreasing heavy-metal concentrations in lettuce. Compared to non-amended control soil, lettuce uptake of Cd, Pb, and Zn was reduced 86%, 58%, and 73%, respectively, by the addition of red-mud.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Technology Research Center, Mine Reclamation Corporation, Seoul 110-727, Republic of Korea. soillsf@mireco.or.krNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19786291

Citation

Lee, Sang-Hwan, et al. "In Situ Stabilization of Cadmium-, Lead-, and Zinc-contaminated Soil Using Various Amendments." Chemosphere, vol. 77, no. 8, 2009, pp. 1069-75.
Lee SH, Lee JS, Choi YJ, et al. In situ stabilization of cadmium-, lead-, and zinc-contaminated soil using various amendments. Chemosphere. 2009;77(8):1069-75.
Lee, S. H., Lee, J. S., Choi, Y. J., & Kim, J. G. (2009). In situ stabilization of cadmium-, lead-, and zinc-contaminated soil using various amendments. Chemosphere, 77(8), 1069-75. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2009.08.056
Lee SH, et al. In Situ Stabilization of Cadmium-, Lead-, and Zinc-contaminated Soil Using Various Amendments. Chemosphere. 2009;77(8):1069-75. PubMed PMID: 19786291.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - In situ stabilization of cadmium-, lead-, and zinc-contaminated soil using various amendments. AU - Lee,Sang-Hwan, AU - Lee,Jin-Soo, AU - Choi,Youn Jeong, AU - Kim,Jeong-Gyu, Y1 - 2009/09/27/ PY - 2009/04/01/received PY - 2009/08/30/revised PY - 2009/08/31/accepted PY - 2009/9/30/entrez PY - 2009/9/30/pubmed PY - 2010/2/4/medline SP - 1069 EP - 75 JF - Chemosphere JO - Chemosphere VL - 77 IS - 8 N2 - Chemical stabilization is an in situ remediation method that uses inexpensive amendments to reduce contaminant availability in polluted soil. We tested the effects of several amendments (limestone, red-mud, and furnace slag) on the extractability of heavy metals, microbial activities, phytoavailability of soil metals (assessed using lettuce, Lactuca sativa L.), and availability of heavy metals in ingested soil to the human gastrointestinal system (assessed using the physiologically based extraction test). The application of soil amendments significantly decreased the amount of soluble and extractable heavy metals in the soil (p<0.05). The decreased extractable metal content of soil was accompanied by increased microbial activity and decreased plant uptake of heavy metals. Soil microbial activities (soil respiration, urease, and dehydrogenase activity) significantly increased in limestone and red-mud-amended soils. Red-mud was the most effective treatment in decreasing heavy-metal concentrations in lettuce. Compared to non-amended control soil, lettuce uptake of Cd, Pb, and Zn was reduced 86%, 58%, and 73%, respectively, by the addition of red-mud. SN - 1879-1298 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/19786291/In_situ_stabilization_of_cadmium__lead__and_zinc_contaminated_soil_using_various_amendments_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0045-6535(09)01041-8 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -