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Aging and temperature effects on DOC and elemental release from a metal contaminated soil
Authors:Martínez Carmen Enid  Jacobson Astrid R  McBride Murray B
Institution:Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Cornell University, 908 Bradfield Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA. cem20@cornell.edu
Abstract:The combined effect of time and temperature on elemental release and speciation from a metal contaminated soil (Master Old Site, MOS) was investigated. The soil was equilibrated at 10, 28, 45, 70 and 90 degrees C for 2 days, 2 weeks, and 2 months in the laboratory. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC), total soluble elements (by ICP), and labile metals (by DPASV) were determined in the filtered (0.22 microm) supernatants. For the samples equilibrated at 90 degrees C, DOC fractions were size fractionated by filtration and centrifugation; a subsample was only centrifuged while another was also filtered through a 0.45 microm filter. Analyses of the supernatants (ICP, DPASV, DOC) were performed on all size fraction subsamples. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) increased both with temperature and incubation time; however, metal behavior was not as uniform. In general, total soluble metal release (ICP) paralleled the behavior of DOC, increasing with both time and temperature, and confirming the importance of soil organic matter (SOM) in metal retention. Voltammetric analysis (dpasv) of Cu and Zn showed that very little of these metals remains labile in solution due, presumably, to complexation with dissolved organic matter. Labile concentrations of Cd, on the other hand, constituted a significant portion (50%) of total soluble Cd. Copper and Al increased in solution with time (up to 2 months) and temperature up to 70 degrees C; however, at 90 degrees C the soluble concentration declined sharply. The same behavior was observed after equilibration for longer periods of time (550 days) at lower temperatures (23 and 70 degrees C). While concentrations of labile Cu and total soluble Cu and Al increased in the unfiltered samples, the trend remained the same. DPASV analysis showing shifts in labile Cu complexes with temperature and time, together with the results from the unfiltered samples, lead to the hypothesis that Cu was complexing with large polymers that could form at the elevated temperature, and thus be removed from the analyzed solution. It is possible that Cu and Al released by SOM oxidation has re-sorbed or complexed to more recalcitrant organic matter or to mineral phases. Variations in the relative molecular size fractions present within the DOC pool produced by increased time and temperature may influence the element-DOC complexes present in solution and their behavior in soil environments.
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