The disposal of a lime water treatment residue on soil and spoil material from a coalmine: a glasshouse investigation.

J Environ Qual

Soil Science, School of Environmental Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Private Bag X01, Scottsville, 3209, South Africa.

Published: May 2007

Eragrostis tef (Zucc.), Cenchrus ciliaris L., and Digitaria eriantha Steud. were grown in a soil (Psammentic Haplustalf) and spoil material from a coalmine both treated with a lime water treatment residue (WTR) at rates of 0, 50, 100, 200, and 400 g kg(-1). The yield of the grasses, from the sum of the three harvests, and concentrations of B, Ca, Cu, K, Fe, Mg, Mn, N, Na, P, and Zn in foliage from the second harvest were determined. The yield of grasses grown in the soil decreased exponentially as WTR application increased. The yields of C. ciliaris, D. eriantha, and E. tef (in the 400 g kg(-1) WTR treated soil) decreased by 74.4, 78.7, and 59.8%, respectively, when compared with the control treatments. In the spoil, the yield of E. tef and D. eriantha decreased by 13.6% and and D. eriantha by 23.9%, while an increase was observed for C. ciliaris (45.4%), at the highest WTR application rate. No relationship existed between yield of E. tef and WTR application rate when grown in the spoil, while a weak negative linear relationship (p < 0.05) was found for D. eriantha and a positive linear relationship existed for C. ciliaris. Magnesium concentrations of the grasses were positively correlated to WTR application rate. Grasses grown in the soil had higher Na concentrations, while those grown in the spoil typically had higher B, N, and Zn concentrations. The decreases in yield were attributed to nutrient deficiencies (notably Zn), induced by high WTR application rates that led to high substrate pH. Disposal of high rates of WTR on the mine materials was not recommended.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2134/jeq2006.0268DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

wtr application
20
grown soil
12
application rate
12
lime water
8
water treatment
8
treatment residue
8
spoil material
8
material coalmine
8
wtr
8
400 kg-1
8

Similar Publications

The naked-eye detection of hazardous pollutants through simple and cost-effective techniques is of great interest to the scientific community and related stakeholders in analytical science. The present study emphases the development of a stimuli-responsive probe by encountering sophisticated techniques for the detection of environmental pollutants. Herein, highly swellable and fluorescent-WTR-CDs-loaded HB-Alg/Gel@WTR-CDs was fabricated through a simple extrusion dripping method.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Validate a novel approach for assessing residual astigmatism's impact on visual acuity in pseudophakic patients using defocus curves and spherical equivalent compensation.

Materials And Methods: Thirteen patients over 40 with cataracts and normal ophthalmological examinations were enrolled in a prospective, non-randomized cohort study. The defocus curve method was employed, wherein visual acuity was measured with spherical lenses ranging from -2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Coarse textured soils have low potential to store carbon (C) due to lack of mineral oxides and have low clay content to protect C from biodegradation and leaching. This study evaluated the potential of stabilizing C by adding metal oxyhydroxide-rich water treatment residuals (WTRs) to an aeolian pure sand (<5% clay) topsoil amended with anaerobic digestate (AD) sludge. The AD sludge was applied at 5% (w/w) with aluminum based WTR (Al-WTR) and iron based WTR (Fe-WTR) co-applied at 1:1 and 2:1 WTR:AD (w/w) ratios and incubated at room temperature for 132 days.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Land application of water treatment residual (WTR) in combination with phosphate-rich organic wastes, like compost or sewage sludge, in nutrient-poor soils was previously shown to promote crop growth. This WTR diversion from landfill to agriculture supports local and international mandates for waste circularity. Although soil-water dynamics-like saturated hydraulic conductivity, water retention, and hydrophobicity-are well-defined for compost and somewhat defined for WTR (except for hydrophobicity), the impacts of co-amending sandy soils with both are not well-defined.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Route-dependent tailoring of carbon dot release in alginate hydrogel beads (HB-Alg@WTR-CDs): A versatile platform for biomedical applications.

Int J Biol Macromol

February 2024

Fluorescence Spectroscopy Research Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, Shivaji University, Kolhapur, Maharashtra, India. Electronic address:

The present investigation explores the different pathways for development of waste tea residue carbon dots (WTR-CDs) loading into hydrogel matrix for WTR-CDs releasing probe. Fluorescent WTR-CDs incorporated into hydrogel matrix were synthesized by valorisation of kitchen waste tea by simple carbonization method (λ = 450 nm, Φ =18.45 %).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!