2003
DOI: 10.2134/jeq2003.1290
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Influence of Soil Geochemical and Physical Properties on the Sorption and Bioaccessibility of Chromium(III)

Abstract: There are numerous Cr(III)-contaminated sites on Department of Defense (DoD) and Department of Energy (DOE) lands that are awaiting possible clean up and closure. Ingestion of contaminated soil by children is the risk driver that generally motivates the likelihood of site remediation. The purpose of this study was to develop a simple statistical model based on common soil properties to estimate the hioaccessibility of Cr(III)-contaminated soil upon ingestion. Thirty-five uncontaminated soils from seven major s… Show more

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Cited by 81 publications
(75 citation statements)
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“…Lower organic matter content of soil also favored desorption of metals from soils. The higher soil CEC generally coexisted with higher content of clay and organic matter, and showed strong ability on the sequestration of metals (Stewart et al, 2003) and vice verse. Another soil property that may be responsible for this effect was manganese oxide, the content of which in Heilongjiang soil was an order of magnitude higher than that of Jiangxi soil.…”
Section: Effects Of Lmwoas and Initial Ph On Desorption Of Cu CD Anmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Lower organic matter content of soil also favored desorption of metals from soils. The higher soil CEC generally coexisted with higher content of clay and organic matter, and showed strong ability on the sequestration of metals (Stewart et al, 2003) and vice verse. Another soil property that may be responsible for this effect was manganese oxide, the content of which in Heilongjiang soil was an order of magnitude higher than that of Jiangxi soil.…”
Section: Effects Of Lmwoas and Initial Ph On Desorption Of Cu CD Anmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…adsorption and surface precipitation) onto soil colloids, a mechanism strongly related to their peculiarities, such as the clay-oxideshydroxides quality and content, inorganic carbon, cation exchange capacity and pH conditions (Covelo et al, 2007;Flogeac et al, 2007;James and Bartlett, 1983;Palmer and Puls, 1994;Stewart et al, 2003).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The low Cu desorption associated with the clay soil suggests that most Cu ions are specifically chemically sorbed by both organic matter and layer silicate clays. The higher soil CEC generally coexisted with higher content of clay and organic matter and showed strong ability on sequestration of metals and vise versa (Stewart et al 2003).…”
Section: Temperature Effects On Cu Desorption Kineticsmentioning
confidence: 96%