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. 2001;113(1):79-85.
doi: 10.1016/s0269-7491(00)00158-5.

Metal associations in soils before and after EDTA extractive decontamination: implications for the effectiveness of further clean-up procedures

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Metal associations in soils before and after EDTA extractive decontamination: implications for the effectiveness of further clean-up procedures

A Barona et al. Environ Pollut. 2001.

Abstract

The distribution of Pb, Ni and Zn in two contaminated soils was determined before and after treating the soils with an EDTA solution. After the EDTA extraction, the proportion of Pb accumulated in the acid-extractable fraction considerably increased, which was related to the greater degree of metal extraction from the other fractions. EDTA was also able to extract certain amounts of Pb, Zn and Ni from the silicate matrix, which implied that these extractable amounts were not so strongly fixed to the residual fraction as previously supposed. As a consequence, after EDTA application, metal content (especially Pb) remained more weakly adsorbed to soil components (more easily leachable), potentially favouring the application of phytoremediation technologies. The extraction recoveries (for only one application) were generally low for the three metals (33-37% for Pb, 5-11% for Ni and 14-19% for Zn), although this fact is an advantage as plants would not be able to assimilate very high mobilised contents of metals.

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