Geochemical simulation of the stabilization process of vanadium-contaminated soil remediated with calcium oxide and ferrous sulfate

Zou, Q; Li, D; Jiang, J; Aihemaiti, A; Gao, Y; Liu, N; Liu, J

HERO ID

5036175

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2019

Language

English

PMID

30856562

HERO ID 5036175
In Press No
Year 2019
Title Geochemical simulation of the stabilization process of vanadium-contaminated soil remediated with calcium oxide and ferrous sulfate
Authors Zou, Q; Li, D; Jiang, J; Aihemaiti, A; Gao, Y; Liu, N; Liu, J
Journal Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
Volume 174
Page Numbers 498-505
Abstract Vanadium (V)-contaminated soil poses health risks to plants, animals, and humans via both direct exposure and through the food chain. Stabilization treatment of metal-contaminated soil can chemically convert metal contaminants into less soluble, mobile, and toxic forms. However, the stabilization mechanisms of V-contaminated soil have not been thoroughly investigated. Therefore, we performed geochemical modeling of V-contaminated soil stabilized with the common binders calcium oxide (CaO) and ferrous sulfate (FeSO4), as well as their mixture, using Visual MINTEQ software. The results were validated and exhibited good agreement with experimental results. For CaO, the formation of Ca2V2O7(s) and Ca3(VO4)2·4H2O(s) under mild and strong alkaline conditions (pH = 8.0-11.5 and 11.5-12.5), respectively, were predicted as the main immobilization routes. For FeSO4, there appeared to be three reaction routes, corresponding to approaches A, B, and C, during the stabilization process. In the simulation, approach C (adsorption of V(V) onto ferrihydrite) was undervalued, whereas approaches A (formation of Fe(VO3)2(s)) and B (reduction of V(V) into V(IV) to form V2O4(s) or adsorb onto soil organic matter) were overvalued. Among the three approaches, approach C had a dominant role and exhibited good agreement with the experimental results. Additionally, soil pH and the saturation index of precipitation had major roles in the stabilization process. The optimal pH ranges for the stabilization of V-contaminated soil using CaO and FeSO4 were pH = 9.5-12.5 and pH = 4.0-5.0, respectively.
Doi 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2019.02.082
Pmid 30856562
Wosid WOS:000463465600057
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English