Diagnosing trace metals contamination in ageing stormwater constructed wetlands by portable X-ray Fluorescence Analyzer (pXRF)

In the context of stormwater management in urban areas, more knowledge is needed about sustainable urban drainage systems (SUDS)' long-term performance. This article reports robust calibration of a portable X-ray Fluorescence Analyzer (pXRF) for a purpose of metal accumulation diagnosis in two...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2022-10, Vol.844, p.157097-157097, Article 157097
Hauptverfasser: Lenormand, Éloïse, Kustner, Coralie, Combroux, Isabelle, Bois, Paul, Wanko, Adrien
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:In the context of stormwater management in urban areas, more knowledge is needed about sustainable urban drainage systems (SUDS)' long-term performance. This article reports robust calibration of a portable X-ray Fluorescence Analyzer (pXRF) for a purpose of metal accumulation diagnosis in two stormwater constructed wetlands (SCWs). Two 9-year-old SCWs located in Eastern France and composed of a sedimentation pond and a vertical-flow reed-bed filter (RBF#1) respectively a horizontal-flow RBF (RBF#2) are studied. A focus is made on the RBFs where five target metals (Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn) are monitored to fulfill three objectives: i) develop a robust analyzing method for both field and laboratory scale; ii) compute a distribution mapping of the metals on the substrate; and iii) identify and quantify contamination hotspots. pXRF measurements present an opportunity for a quick field diagnosis of such ageing systems once calibrated. An optimal 63 s beam shooting time was selected for analyses, and optimal particle size distribution was set below 250 μm. As water content is known to be a critical factor influencing measuring quality, correction factors were determined to allow for field campaign up to 30 % of water content. Metals are more accumulated in RBF#1 than in RBF#2 because of the particle size distribution and hydraulic regime of the RBFs. Moreover, RBF#1 displays a higher metal accumulation at the water supply outputs while the distribution pattern in RBF#2 is more diffuse. Only 34 %, resp. 22 % of RBF#1 and RBF#2 surface is contaminated, with corresponding concentrations ranging among the highest 50 % and 25 % concentrations. Eventually, the RBF#1 upper layer (0–5 cm) higher organic matter content generates more metal retention than its deeper layer whereas in RBF#2 metal concentration is homogeneous along depth. These results can be useful to optimize the long-term maintenance and possibly the sizing of such systems. [Display omitted] •A high precision (RSE < 5 %) is obtained for >60 % of the measurements.•At most 34 % of the filter surface is impacted by the 50 % highest concentrations.•1.5 to 90-fold metal enrichment is evidenced in the 9-year-old vertical filter.•The influence of the water content on measurement can be compensated up to 30 %.•Metal mapping distribution in filters may lead to size and management adjustment.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157097