Artificially lead-contaminated soils with different lead contents (200, 450, 600, and 900 ppm) were thermally immobilized in both fixed-bed and fluidized-bed modes at moderate treating temperatures (less than 500 °C) for various retention times. Cement powder and brick powder were added to the artificially contaminated soils to enhance lead immobilization. Results indicate that increasing treating temperature and time increases the extent of lead immobilization, as determined by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (U.S. EPA) Toxicity Characteristics Leachability Procedure (TCLP). The percentage of lead leached from the soil/cement mixtures was in the range of less than 0.251%, compared with the range between 13.6% and 40.7% for the corresponding soil/brick mixtures. As the amount of brick dust added to the Pb-doped soil was increased, the specific Pb immobilization effectiveness increased from 0.0675 to 0.149 mg Pb/g brick (for the 20- and 50-gram brick addition, respectively). An increase in air flow rate from 2 to 40 L/min caused a slight decrease in the Pb leaching percentage from 14.96% to 11.59%. Both the Freundlich and Langmuir isotherms give a satisfactory fit (r = 0.945 ~ 0.998) for the data derived from a TCLP test of the thermally-treated soil samples (105 °C and 500 °C) that contained lead contaminants. Sorption of lead contaminants in soil and sorbent matrices was the primary type of chemisorption. The kinetic results indicated that the Pb-doped soil system was too complicated to be described by a simple calculation.
CITATION STYLE
Wei, Y. L. (1996). Thermal immobilization of lead contaminants in soils treated in a fixed- and fluidized-bed incinerator at moderate temperatures. Journal of the Air and Waste Management Association, 46(5), 422–429. https://doi.org/10.1080/10473289.1996.10467475
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.