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Effective multi-metal removal from plant incineration ash via the combination of bioleaching and brine leaching

Plant incineration ash is the final product from the remediation of multi-metal contaminated soils by the phytoextraction process. The content of heavy metals in plant ash was found to be higher than the regulatory criteria and it was thus classified as hazardous waste. So far, no eco-friendly and c...

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Autores principales: Li, Su, Tian, Zhuang, Liu, Ronghui, Zhou, Wenbo, Cheng, Haina, Sun, Jianxing, Zhao, Kaifang, Wang, Yuguang, Zhou, Hongbo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9048034/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35494665
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra08267k
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author Li, Su
Tian, Zhuang
Liu, Ronghui
Zhou, Wenbo
Cheng, Haina
Sun, Jianxing
Zhao, Kaifang
Wang, Yuguang
Zhou, Hongbo
author_facet Li, Su
Tian, Zhuang
Liu, Ronghui
Zhou, Wenbo
Cheng, Haina
Sun, Jianxing
Zhao, Kaifang
Wang, Yuguang
Zhou, Hongbo
author_sort Li, Su
collection PubMed
description Plant incineration ash is the final product from the remediation of multi-metal contaminated soils by the phytoextraction process. The content of heavy metals in plant ash was found to be higher than the regulatory criteria and it was thus classified as hazardous waste. So far, no eco-friendly and cost-effective technology has been developed for the management of this residue. Herein, a cleaner strategy of bioleaching combined with brine leaching of multi-metals from plant ash was developed. The bioleaching results indicated that 88.7% (Zn), 93.2% (Cd), 99.9% (Mn) and 13.8% (Pb) were achieved under optimum conditions of Fe(ii) concentration 6.0 g L(−1), pH 1.8 and pulp density 15% (w/v). Subsequently, the introduction of brine leaching using 200 g L(−1) NaCl significantly increased Pb recovery to 70.6% under conditions of 15% (w/v) pulp density, thereby ultimately achieving deep recovery of all metals. An investigation of the mechanism revealed that H(+) attack and microorganisms were the dominant mechanism for bioleaching of Zn, Cd and Mn, and the bioleaching kinetics of Zn in ash were controlled by interface mass transfer and diffusion across the product layer. Risk assessment tests indicated that the leached residues could pass the TCLP test standard and be safely reused as nonhazardous materials. These findings demonstrated that the two-stage leaching strategy was feasible and promising for multi-metal removal from plant ash.
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spelling pubmed-90480342022-04-28 Effective multi-metal removal from plant incineration ash via the combination of bioleaching and brine leaching Li, Su Tian, Zhuang Liu, Ronghui Zhou, Wenbo Cheng, Haina Sun, Jianxing Zhao, Kaifang Wang, Yuguang Zhou, Hongbo RSC Adv Chemistry Plant incineration ash is the final product from the remediation of multi-metal contaminated soils by the phytoextraction process. The content of heavy metals in plant ash was found to be higher than the regulatory criteria and it was thus classified as hazardous waste. So far, no eco-friendly and cost-effective technology has been developed for the management of this residue. Herein, a cleaner strategy of bioleaching combined with brine leaching of multi-metals from plant ash was developed. The bioleaching results indicated that 88.7% (Zn), 93.2% (Cd), 99.9% (Mn) and 13.8% (Pb) were achieved under optimum conditions of Fe(ii) concentration 6.0 g L(−1), pH 1.8 and pulp density 15% (w/v). Subsequently, the introduction of brine leaching using 200 g L(−1) NaCl significantly increased Pb recovery to 70.6% under conditions of 15% (w/v) pulp density, thereby ultimately achieving deep recovery of all metals. An investigation of the mechanism revealed that H(+) attack and microorganisms were the dominant mechanism for bioleaching of Zn, Cd and Mn, and the bioleaching kinetics of Zn in ash were controlled by interface mass transfer and diffusion across the product layer. Risk assessment tests indicated that the leached residues could pass the TCLP test standard and be safely reused as nonhazardous materials. These findings demonstrated that the two-stage leaching strategy was feasible and promising for multi-metal removal from plant ash. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020-01-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9048034/ /pubmed/35494665 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra08267k Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Li, Su
Tian, Zhuang
Liu, Ronghui
Zhou, Wenbo
Cheng, Haina
Sun, Jianxing
Zhao, Kaifang
Wang, Yuguang
Zhou, Hongbo
Effective multi-metal removal from plant incineration ash via the combination of bioleaching and brine leaching
title Effective multi-metal removal from plant incineration ash via the combination of bioleaching and brine leaching
title_full Effective multi-metal removal from plant incineration ash via the combination of bioleaching and brine leaching
title_fullStr Effective multi-metal removal from plant incineration ash via the combination of bioleaching and brine leaching
title_full_unstemmed Effective multi-metal removal from plant incineration ash via the combination of bioleaching and brine leaching
title_short Effective multi-metal removal from plant incineration ash via the combination of bioleaching and brine leaching
title_sort effective multi-metal removal from plant incineration ash via the combination of bioleaching and brine leaching
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9048034/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35494665
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra08267k
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