Environmental Risk of Arsenic Mobilization from Disposed Sand Filter Materials

Arsenic (As)-bearing water treatment residuals (WTRs) from household sand filters are usually disposed on top of floodplain soils and may act as a secondary As contamination source. We hypothesized that open disposal of these filter-sands to soils will facilitate As release under reducing conditions...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2022-12, Vol.56 (23), p.16822-16830
Hauptverfasser: Le, Anh Van, Muehe, E. Marie, Drabesch, Soeren, Lezama Pacheco, Juan, Bayer, Timm, Joshi, Prachi, Kappler, Andreas, Mansor, Muammar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Arsenic (As)-bearing water treatment residuals (WTRs) from household sand filters are usually disposed on top of floodplain soils and may act as a secondary As contamination source. We hypothesized that open disposal of these filter-sands to soils will facilitate As release under reducing conditions. To quantify the mobilization risk of As, we incubated the filter-sand, the soil, and a mixture of the filter-sand and soil in anoxic artificial rainwater and followed the dynamics of reactive Fe and As in aqueous, solid, and colloidal phases. Microbially mediated Fe­(III)/As­(V) reduction led to the mobilization of 0.1–4% of the total As into solution with the highest As released from the mixture microcosms equaling 210 μg/L. Due to the filter-sand and soil interaction, Mössbauer and X-ray absorption spectroscopies indicated that up to 10% Fe­(III) and 32% As­(V) were reduced in the mixture microcosm. Additionally, the mass concentrations of colloidal Fe and As analyzed by single-particle ICP-MS decreased by 77–100% compared to the onset of reducing conditions with the highest decrease observed in the mixture setups (>95%). Overall, our study suggests that (i) soil provides bioavailable components (e.g., organic matter) that promote As mobilization via microbial reduction of As-bearing Fe­(III) (oxyhydr)­oxides and (ii) As mobilization as colloids is important especially right after the onset of reducing conditions but its importance decreases over time.
ISSN:0013-936X
1520-5851
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.2c04915