Compost enriched with inorganic amendments has been evaluated in laboratory-based experiments for its effectiveness to immobilise heavy metals in contaminated soils. This paper reports the results pertaining to copper (Cu) and cadmium (Cd) only. The inorganic amendments used were naturally occurring zeolite-Clinoptilolite and synthetic iron oxide (Fe 2 O 3 ). A series of experiments have been performed on the amended soils and the results demonstrated that a combination of compost/iron oxide was effective in reducing the uptake of Cu in rye grass (Lolium perenne L.) whereas compost/iron oxide as well as compost/zeolite mixture was effective for reducing Cd uptake. The amended compost performed better in re-vegetating contaminated soil compared to compost or amendments alone. The sequential extraction of the control sample showed that major fraction of both Cu and Cd were associated with organic fraction indicating that the metals might be available to plants under oxidising conditions of soil. The percentage of Cu in the control sample associated with different fractions was in the following order: Organic > Residual > Reducible > Exchangeable fraction whereas for Cd it was: Organic > Reducible > Residual > Exchangeable. The sequential extraction of amended soils showed that exchangeable Cu decreased by 50% to 92% compared to the control. An increase in residual fraction of Cd (up to 40%) was observed in the amended soils. It was concluded that zeolite and/or iron oxide enriched compost can be used effectively for immobilising Cu and Cd in contaminated soils. The effect of amended compost on other metals should be taken into consideration for real field applicaitons.
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