Column experiments combined with geochemical modeling, microscopic inspections, spectroscopic interrogations, and wet chemical extractions were used to study sediment-dependent Cr(VI) desorption, physical location, mineral association, and attenuation mechanism(s) in four freshly or naturally aged contaminated sediments exposed to concentrated Cr(VI) waste fluids. Results showed that majority of Cr(VI) mass was easily removed from the sediments (equilibrium site K(d) varied from 0 to 0.33 mL g(-1) and equilibrium site fraction was greater than 95%). Long tailings of time-dependent Cr(VI) concentrations above maximum contaminant level of 1.9 micromol L(-1) were also observed (kinetically controlled fraction K(d) and desorption reaction half-lives varied from 0 to 45 mL g(-1), and from 76.1 to 126 h, respectively). Microscopic and spectroscopic measurements confirmed that Cr was concentrated within fine-grained coatings in small areas mainly rich in phyllosilicates that contained both Cr(III) and Cr(VI). However, Cr(VI) reduction was neither significant nor complete. Under slightly alkaline and oxic conditions, contaminant Cr in the sediments occurred: (i) In the highly mobile pool (over 95% of total Cr); (ii) In the slow and time-dependent releasing pool, which served as long-term source of contamination; (iii) As reduced Cr(III) which most likely formed during Cr(VI) reaction with aqueous, sorbed, or structural Fe(II).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es802658x | DOI Listing |
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