Organic acids effects on desorption of heavy metals from a contaminated soil

被引:37
作者
do Nascimento, Clistenes Williams Araujo [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Fed Rural Pernambuco, Dept Agron, BR-52171900 Recife, PE, Brazil
关键词
phytoremediation; phytoextraction; soil pollution;
D O I
10.1590/S0103-90162006000300010
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
Phytoremediation of heavy metals is a biotechnology that extracts metals from soils and transfer them to plant. As hyperaccumulator species have demonstrated low potential for commercial phytoextraction, synthetic chelates have been successfully used to induce accumulation of metals by high-biomass plants. However, they pose serious environmental drawbacks regarding excessive amount of metals solubilized. In search for synthetic chelate-alternatives, this paper evaluate the performance of DTPA, EDTA, citric acid, oxalic acid, vanillic acid, and gallic acid in desorbing Cd, Pb, Zn, Cu, and Ni from soil. DTPA and EDTA were highly effective in desorbing Cd, Pb, Zn, Cu, and Ni from soil. However, the excessively high concentration of metals brought in solution by such chelates limits their application in the field. Citric and oxalic acids desorbed substantial quantities of Zn, Cu, and Ni if applied at 10 or 20 mmol kg(-1). At the 20 mmol kg(-1) dose, vanillic and gallic acids solubilized significant amounts of Zn, Ni, and Cd from soil. None of the tested low molecular weight organic acids substantially increased the Pb concentration in soil solution.
引用
收藏
页码:276 / 280
页数:5
相关论文
共 20 条
[1]   Enhanced accumulation of Pb in Indian mustard by soil-applied chelating agents [J].
Blaylock, MJ ;
Salt, DE ;
Dushenkov, S ;
Zakharova, O ;
Gussman, C ;
Kapulnik, Y ;
Ensley, BD ;
Raskin, I .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1997, 31 (03) :860-865
[2]  
Blaylock MJ, 2000, PHYTOREMEDIATION OF CONTAMINATED SOIL AND WATER, P1
[3]   Leaching and uptake of heavy metals by ten different species of plants during an EDTA-assisted phytoextraction process [J].
Chen, YH ;
Li, XD ;
Shen, ZG .
CHEMOSPHERE, 2004, 57 (03) :187-196
[4]   Comparison of natural organic acids and synthetic chelates at enhancing phytoextraction of metals from a multi-metal contaminated soil [J].
do Nascimento, CWA ;
Amarasiriwardena, D ;
Xing, BS .
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2006, 140 (01) :114-123
[5]  
Gupta SK, 2000, PHYTOREMEDIATION OF CONTAMINATED SOIL AND WATER, P303
[6]   Phytoremediation of lead-contaminated soils: Role of synthetic chelates in lead phytoextraction [J].
Huang, JWW ;
Chen, JJ ;
Berti, WR ;
Cunningham, SD .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1997, 31 (03) :800-805
[7]   Chelator induced phytoextraction and in situ soil washing of Cu [J].
Kos, B ;
Lestan, D .
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2004, 132 (02) :333-339
[8]   Phytoremediation:: novel approaches to cleaning up polluted soils [J].
Krämer, U .
CURRENT OPINION IN BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2005, 16 (02) :133-141
[9]   Kinetics of cadmium release from soils as influenced by organic acids: Implication in cadmium availability [J].
Krishnamurti, GSR ;
Cieslinski, G ;
Huang, PM ;
VanRees, KCJ .
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, 1997, 26 (01) :271-277
[10]   Phytoremediation of heavy metal-contaminated soils: Natural hyperaccumulation versus chemically enhanced phytoextraction [J].
Lombi, E ;
Zhao, FJ ;
Dunham, SJ ;
McGrath, SP .
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, 2001, 30 (06) :1919-1926