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Effects of source materials on desorption kinetics of carcinogenic PAHs from contaminated soils

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Effects of source materials on desorption kinetics of carcinogenic PAHs from contaminated soils. / Yu, L.; Duan, L.; Naidu, R. et al.
In: Chemosphere, Vol. 335, 139095, 30.09.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Yu L, Duan L, Naidu R, Meng F, Semple KT. Effects of source materials on desorption kinetics of carcinogenic PAHs from contaminated soils. Chemosphere. 2023 Sept 30;335:139095. Epub 2023 Jun 3. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.139095

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Yu, L. ; Duan, L. ; Naidu, R. et al. / Effects of source materials on desorption kinetics of carcinogenic PAHs from contaminated soils. In: Chemosphere. 2023 ; Vol. 335.

Bibtex

@article{a44ef72a62854e84be65400e3b26feea,
title = "Effects of source materials on desorption kinetics of carcinogenic PAHs from contaminated soils",
abstract = "Research investigating the desorptive behaviour of PAHs from contaminated soils often overlooked the effects of source materials, especially coal tar and coal tar pitch and materials alike. In this study, a refined experimental approach was adopted to establish a simple-to-complex continuum of systems that allow the investigation of desorption kinetics of benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) and 3 other carcinogenic PAHs (cPAHs) over an incubation period of 48 d. By comparing the modelled desorption parameters, elucidation of the effects of PAH source materials on their desorptive behaviour was achieved. Desorption of cPAHs from coal tar and pitch was enhanced when they were added to soils, with rapidly desorbing fraction (Frap) of BaP increased from 0.68% for pitch to 1.10% and 2.66% for pitch treated soils, and from 2.57% for coal tar to 6.24% for coal tar treated soil G and 8.76% for coal tar treated sand (1 d). At 1 d, desorption of target cPAHs from solvent and source material spiked soils generally followed the order of solvent > coal tar > pitch. Increases in Frap of cPAHs were observed in coal tar-treated soils after 48 d soil incubation (0.33%–1.16% for soil M, p ≥ 0.05, 6.24%–9.21% for soil G, p < 0.05) and was attributed to the continuous migration of coal tar as a non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) into soil pore structures. Slow desorption was dominated by source materials, whereas the extents and rates of rapid desorption (Frap and krap) were more controlled by the quantity of soil organic matter (SOM), rather than quality of SOM (as in solvent-spiked soils). The results of this study challenged the role of PAH source materials as {\textquoteleft}sinks{\textquoteright} and led to the proposed roles of coal tar and pitch and source materials alike as {\textquoteleft}reservoirs{\textquoteright} with a risk-driven perspective.",
keywords = "PAHs, Soil, Source materials, Desorption kinetics",
author = "L. Yu and L. Duan and R. Naidu and F. Meng and K.T. Semple",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.139095",
language = "English",
volume = "335",
journal = "Chemosphere",
issn = "0045-6535",
publisher = "NLM (Medline)",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects of source materials on desorption kinetics of carcinogenic PAHs from contaminated soils

AU - Yu, L.

AU - Duan, L.

AU - Naidu, R.

AU - Meng, F.

AU - Semple, K.T.

PY - 2023/9/30

Y1 - 2023/9/30

N2 - Research investigating the desorptive behaviour of PAHs from contaminated soils often overlooked the effects of source materials, especially coal tar and coal tar pitch and materials alike. In this study, a refined experimental approach was adopted to establish a simple-to-complex continuum of systems that allow the investigation of desorption kinetics of benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) and 3 other carcinogenic PAHs (cPAHs) over an incubation period of 48 d. By comparing the modelled desorption parameters, elucidation of the effects of PAH source materials on their desorptive behaviour was achieved. Desorption of cPAHs from coal tar and pitch was enhanced when they were added to soils, with rapidly desorbing fraction (Frap) of BaP increased from 0.68% for pitch to 1.10% and 2.66% for pitch treated soils, and from 2.57% for coal tar to 6.24% for coal tar treated soil G and 8.76% for coal tar treated sand (1 d). At 1 d, desorption of target cPAHs from solvent and source material spiked soils generally followed the order of solvent > coal tar > pitch. Increases in Frap of cPAHs were observed in coal tar-treated soils after 48 d soil incubation (0.33%–1.16% for soil M, p ≥ 0.05, 6.24%–9.21% for soil G, p < 0.05) and was attributed to the continuous migration of coal tar as a non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) into soil pore structures. Slow desorption was dominated by source materials, whereas the extents and rates of rapid desorption (Frap and krap) were more controlled by the quantity of soil organic matter (SOM), rather than quality of SOM (as in solvent-spiked soils). The results of this study challenged the role of PAH source materials as ‘sinks’ and led to the proposed roles of coal tar and pitch and source materials alike as ‘reservoirs’ with a risk-driven perspective.

AB - Research investigating the desorptive behaviour of PAHs from contaminated soils often overlooked the effects of source materials, especially coal tar and coal tar pitch and materials alike. In this study, a refined experimental approach was adopted to establish a simple-to-complex continuum of systems that allow the investigation of desorption kinetics of benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) and 3 other carcinogenic PAHs (cPAHs) over an incubation period of 48 d. By comparing the modelled desorption parameters, elucidation of the effects of PAH source materials on their desorptive behaviour was achieved. Desorption of cPAHs from coal tar and pitch was enhanced when they were added to soils, with rapidly desorbing fraction (Frap) of BaP increased from 0.68% for pitch to 1.10% and 2.66% for pitch treated soils, and from 2.57% for coal tar to 6.24% for coal tar treated soil G and 8.76% for coal tar treated sand (1 d). At 1 d, desorption of target cPAHs from solvent and source material spiked soils generally followed the order of solvent > coal tar > pitch. Increases in Frap of cPAHs were observed in coal tar-treated soils after 48 d soil incubation (0.33%–1.16% for soil M, p ≥ 0.05, 6.24%–9.21% for soil G, p < 0.05) and was attributed to the continuous migration of coal tar as a non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) into soil pore structures. Slow desorption was dominated by source materials, whereas the extents and rates of rapid desorption (Frap and krap) were more controlled by the quantity of soil organic matter (SOM), rather than quality of SOM (as in solvent-spiked soils). The results of this study challenged the role of PAH source materials as ‘sinks’ and led to the proposed roles of coal tar and pitch and source materials alike as ‘reservoirs’ with a risk-driven perspective.

KW - PAHs

KW - Soil

KW - Source materials

KW - Desorption kinetics

U2 - 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.139095

DO - 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.139095

M3 - Journal article

VL - 335

JO - Chemosphere

JF - Chemosphere

SN - 0045-6535

M1 - 139095

ER -