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Amendment of biochar reduces the release of toxic elements under dynamic redox conditions in a contaminated floodplain soil.
Chemosphere. 2016 Jan; 142:41-7.C

Abstract

Biochar (BC) can be used to remediate soils contaminated with potential toxic elements (PTEs). However, the efficiency of BC to immobilize PTEs in highly contaminated floodplain soils under dynamic redox conditions has not been studied up to date. Thus, we have (i) quantified the impact of pre-definite redox conditions on the release dynamics of dissolved aluminum (Al), arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), nickel (Ni), and zinc (Zn) in a highly contaminated soil (CS) (non-treated) and in the same soil treated with 10 g kg(-1) biochar based material (CS+BC), and (ii) assessed the efficacy of the material to reduce the concentrations of PTEs in soil solution under dynamic redox conditions using an automated biogeochemical microcosm apparatus. The impact of redox potential (EH), pH, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), iron (Fe), manganese (Mn), and sulfate (SO4(2-)) on dynamics of PTEs was also determined. The EH was lowered to +68 mV and afterwards increased stepwise to +535 mV. Significant negative correlation between EH and pH in CS and CS+BC was detected. The systematic increase of EH along with decrease of pH favors the mobilization of PTEs in CS and CS+BC. The material addition seems to have little effect on redox processes because pattern of EH/pH and release dynamics of PTEs was basically similar in CS and CS+BC. However, concentrations of dissolved PTEs were considerably lower in CS+BC than in CS which demonstrates that BC is able to decrease concentrations of dissolved PTEs even under dynamic redox conditions.

Authors+Show Affiliations

University of Wuppertal, Department D, Soil- and Groundwater-Management, Pauluskirchstraβe 7, 42285 Wuppertal, Germany. Electronic address: rinklebe@uni-wuppertal.de.University of Wuppertal, Department D, Soil- and Groundwater-Management, Pauluskirchstraβe 7, 42285 Wuppertal, Germany; University of Kafrelsheikh, Faculty of Agriculture, Department of Soil and Water Sciences, 33516 Kafr El-Sheikh, Egypt.University of Wuppertal, Department D, Soil- and Groundwater-Management, Pauluskirchstraβe 7, 42285 Wuppertal, Germany.

Pub Type(s)

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

Language

eng

PubMed ID

25900116

Citation

Rinklebe, Jörg, et al. "Amendment of Biochar Reduces the Release of Toxic Elements Under Dynamic Redox Conditions in a Contaminated Floodplain Soil." Chemosphere, vol. 142, 2016, pp. 41-7.
Rinklebe J, Shaheen SM, Frohne T. Amendment of biochar reduces the release of toxic elements under dynamic redox conditions in a contaminated floodplain soil. Chemosphere. 2016;142:41-7.
Rinklebe, J., Shaheen, S. M., & Frohne, T. (2016). Amendment of biochar reduces the release of toxic elements under dynamic redox conditions in a contaminated floodplain soil. Chemosphere, 142, 41-7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2015.03.067
Rinklebe J, Shaheen SM, Frohne T. Amendment of Biochar Reduces the Release of Toxic Elements Under Dynamic Redox Conditions in a Contaminated Floodplain Soil. Chemosphere. 2016;142:41-7. PubMed PMID: 25900116.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Amendment of biochar reduces the release of toxic elements under dynamic redox conditions in a contaminated floodplain soil. AU - Rinklebe,Jörg, AU - Shaheen,Sabry M, AU - Frohne,Tina, Y1 - 2015/04/18/ PY - 2014/11/28/received PY - 2015/03/27/revised PY - 2015/03/30/accepted PY - 2015/4/23/entrez PY - 2015/4/23/pubmed PY - 2016/6/18/medline KW - Biochar based material KW - Immobilization of trace metal(loid)s KW - Paddy soil KW - Redox processes KW - Soil additives SP - 41 EP - 7 JF - Chemosphere JO - Chemosphere VL - 142 N2 - Biochar (BC) can be used to remediate soils contaminated with potential toxic elements (PTEs). However, the efficiency of BC to immobilize PTEs in highly contaminated floodplain soils under dynamic redox conditions has not been studied up to date. Thus, we have (i) quantified the impact of pre-definite redox conditions on the release dynamics of dissolved aluminum (Al), arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), nickel (Ni), and zinc (Zn) in a highly contaminated soil (CS) (non-treated) and in the same soil treated with 10 g kg(-1) biochar based material (CS+BC), and (ii) assessed the efficacy of the material to reduce the concentrations of PTEs in soil solution under dynamic redox conditions using an automated biogeochemical microcosm apparatus. The impact of redox potential (EH), pH, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), iron (Fe), manganese (Mn), and sulfate (SO4(2-)) on dynamics of PTEs was also determined. The EH was lowered to +68 mV and afterwards increased stepwise to +535 mV. Significant negative correlation between EH and pH in CS and CS+BC was detected. The systematic increase of EH along with decrease of pH favors the mobilization of PTEs in CS and CS+BC. The material addition seems to have little effect on redox processes because pattern of EH/pH and release dynamics of PTEs was basically similar in CS and CS+BC. However, concentrations of dissolved PTEs were considerably lower in CS+BC than in CS which demonstrates that BC is able to decrease concentrations of dissolved PTEs even under dynamic redox conditions. SN - 1879-1298 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/25900116/Amendment_of_biochar_reduces_the_release_of_toxic_elements_under_dynamic_redox_conditions_in_a_contaminated_floodplain_soil_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -