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Evaluation of electrokinetic removal of heavy metals from tailing soils

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Abstract
Electrokinetic remediation was studied for the removal of toxic heavy metals from tailing soils. The study emphasized the dependency of removal efficiencies upon their speciations, as demonstrated by the different extraction methods used, which included sequential extraction, total digestion, and 0.1 N HCl extraction. The tailing soils examined showed different physicochemical characteristics, such as initial pH, particle size distribution, and major mineral constituents, and they contained high concentrations of target metal contaminants in various forms. The electrokinetic removal efficiencies of heavy metals were significantly influenced by their partitioning prior to treatment, and the pHs of the tailing soils. The mobile and weakly bound fractions of heavy metals, such as the exchangeable fraction, were easily removed by electrokinetic treatment (more than 90% removal efficiency), but immobile and strongly bound fractions, such as the organically bound species and residual fractions, were not significantly removed (less than 20% removal efficiencies).
Author(s)
Kim, SOKim, Kyoung-WoongStuben, D
Issued Date
2002-08
Type
Article
DOI
10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9372(2002)128:8(705)
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/18452
Publisher
American Society of Civil Engineers
Citation
Journal of Environmental Engineering, ASCE, v.128, no.8, pp.705 - 715
ISSN
0733-9372
Appears in Collections:
Department of Environment and Energy Engineering > 1. Journal Articles
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