Importance Of Iron Oxides As Carriers For Heavy Metals In Contaminated Soils And Prospects For Their Separation

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
M. Langen H. Hoberg B. Hamacher
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
5
File Size:
406 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1995

Abstract

Since the term "abandoned hazardous sites" was first coined in the 1978 environmental report of the Council of Environmental Specialists, a number of different types of technology has been developed in the Federal Republic of Germany for the remediation of contaminated soils /l/. At former sites of the mining industry, such as metallurgical and coking plants whose soil has been contaminated by organic and inorganic pollutants over decades of industrial activity, there is an exceeding necessity for soil remediation. Also, many former locations of metal processing works, battery factories or scrap yards have been contaminated in particular by heavy metals. Wet mechanical soil decontamination has proven successful over the past 10-15 years in the purification of these soils The process goal is the enrichment of the pollutants in certain plant products and the separation of a pollutant concentrate from the decontaminated soil. Table 1 lists the steps of the highly advanced wet mechanical soil decontamination process to achieve this process goal. Table 1 lists both the name of each process step and its goal in terms of a direct separation of the pollutant or the preparation of the soil for subsequent separation steps. For the separation of heavy metals, density sorting and separation techniques utilising flotation were specifically used. The use of chemical auxiliaries such as acids and lye is limited to special cases because these in themselves produce additional environmental impact and the economical effficiency of these techniques compared to conventional methods is lowered by supplementary process steps for water purification. The subject of this presentation is to consider how soil decontamination processes can be effectively improved through a description of the material properties of soils contaminated by heavy metals, and through carrying out basic investigations about the adsorption of heavy metals. Soils of different origins, especially those from former mining and metallurgical sites, were used for the experiments.
Citation

APA: M. Langen H. Hoberg B. Hamacher  (1995)  Importance Of Iron Oxides As Carriers For Heavy Metals In Contaminated Soils And Prospects For Their Separation

MLA: M. Langen H. Hoberg B. Hamacher Importance Of Iron Oxides As Carriers For Heavy Metals In Contaminated Soils And Prospects For Their Separation. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1995.

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