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Sustainable removal of soil arsenic by naturally-formed iron oxides on plastic tubes

  • Zhao Feng Yuan
  • , Tong Yao Pu
  • , Chen Yu Jin
  • , Wei Jia Feng
  • , Jia Yue Wang
  • , Williamson Gustave
  • , Jonathan Bridge
  • , Yi Li Cheng
  • , Xian Jin Tang
  • , Yong Guan Zhu
  • , Zheng Chen*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University
  • Zhejiang University
  • University of Minnesota Duluth
  • University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna
  • University of the Bahamas
  • Sheffield Hallam University
  • Chinese Academy of Sciences

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Arsenic (As) pollution in paddy fields is a major threat to rice safety. Existing As remediation techniques are costly, require external chemical addition and degrade soil properties. Here, we report the use of plastic tubes as a recyclable tool to precisely extract As from contaminated soils. Following insertion into flooded paddy soils, polyethylene tube walls were covered by thin but massive Fe coatings of 76.9–367 mg Fe m−2 in 2 weeks, which adsorbed significant amounts of As. The formation of tube-wall Fe oxides was driven by local Fe-oxidizing bacteria with oxygen produced by oxygenic phototrophs (e.g., Cyanobacteria) or diffused from air through the tube wall. The tubes with As-bound Fe oxides can be easily separated from soil and then washed and reused. We tested the As removal efficiency in a pot experiment to remove As from ~ 20 cm depth/40 kg soils in a 2-year experiment and achieved an overall removal efficiency of 152 mg As m−2 soil year−1, comparable to phytoremediation with the As hyperaccumulator Pteris vittata. The cost of Fe hooks was estimated at 8325 RMB ha−1 year−1, and the profit of growing rice (around 16080 RMB ha−1 year−1 can be still maintained. The As accumulated in rice tissues was markedly decreased in the treatment (>11.1 %). This work provides a low-cost and sustainable soil remediation method for the targeted removal of As from soils and a useful tool for the study and management of the biogeochemical Fe cycle in paddy soils.

Original languageEnglish
Article number129626
JournalJournal of Hazardous Materials
Volume439
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Oct 2022

Keywords

  • Adsorption
  • Arsenic remediation
  • Iron oxides
  • Paddy soil
  • Rice

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