- Title
- The effect of environmental conditions and soil physicochemistry on phosphate stabilisation of Pb in shooting range soils
- Creator
- Sanderson, Peter; Naidu, Ravi; Bolan, Nanthi
- Relation
- Journal of Environmental Management Vol. 170, Issue April 2016, p. 123-130
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.01.017
- Publisher
- Academic Press
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2016
- Description
- The stabilisation of Pb in the soil by phosphate is influenced by environmental conditions and physicochemical properties of the soils to which it is applied. Stabilisation of Pb by phosphate was examined in four soils under different environmental conditions.The effect of soil moisture and temperature on stabilisation of Pb by phosphate was examined by measurement of water extractable and bioaccessible Pb, sequential fractionation and X-ray absorption spectroscopy. The addition of humic acid, ammonium nitrate and chloride was also examined for inhibition or improvement of Pb stability with phosphate treatment.The effect of moisture level varied between soils. In soil MB and DA a soil moisture level of 50% water holding capacity was sufficient to maximise stabilisation of Pb, but in soil TV and PE reduction in bioaccessible Pb was inhibited at this moisture level. Providing moisture at twice the soil water holding capacity did not enhance the effect of phosphate on Pb stabilisation. The difference of Pb stability as a result of incubating phosphate treated soils at 18 °C and 37 °C was relatively small. However wet-dry cycles decreased the effectiveness of phosphate treatment. The reduction in bioaccessible Pb obtained was between 20 and 40% with the most optimal treatment conditions. The reduction in water extractable Pb by phosphate was substantial regardless of incubation conditions and the effect of different temperature and soil moisture regimes was not significant.Selective sequential extraction showed phosphate treatment converted Pb in fraction 1 (exchangeable, acid and water soluble) to fraction 2 (reducible). There were small difference in fraction 4 (residual) Pb and fraction 1 as a result of treatment conditions. X-ray absorption spectroscopy of stabilised PE soil revealed small differences in Pb speciation under varying soil moisture and temperature treatments. The addition of humic acid and chloride produced the greatest effect on Pb speciation in phosphate treated soils.
- Subject
- lead; chemical stablisation; phosphate; shooting range
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1319593
- Identifier
- uon:23911
- Identifier
- ISSN:0301-4797
- Language
- eng
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