Remediation of a Sandy Soil Contaminated with Cadmium, Nickel, and Zinc using an Insoluble Polyacrylate Polymer
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Abstract
This study was carried out to investigate whether an insoluble polyacrylate polymer could be used to remediate a sandy soil contaminated with cadmium (Cd) (30 and 60 mg Cd kg21 of soil), nickel(Ni) (50 and 100 mg Ni kg21 of soil), zinc (Zn) (250 and 400 mg Zn kg21 of soil), or the three elements together (30 mg Cd, 50 mg Ni, and 250 mg Zn kg21 of soil). Growth of perennial ryegrass was stimulated in the polymeramended soil contaminated with the greatest amounts of Ni or Zn, and when the three metals were present, compared with the unamended soil with the same levels of contamination. Shoots of plants cultivated in the amended soil had concentrations of the metals that were 24–67% of those in plants from the unamended contaminated soil. After ryegrass had been growing for 87 days, the amounts of water-extractable metals present in the amended soil varied from 8 to 53% of those in the unamended soil. The results are consistent with soil remediation being achieved through removal of the metals from soil solution.