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Groundwater co-contaminant behavior of arsenic and selenium at a lead and zinc smelting facility.

Authors :
Wilkin, Richard T.
Lee, Tony R.
Beak, Douglas G.
Anderson, Robert
Burns, Betsy
Source :
Applied Geochemistry. Feb2018, Vol. 89, p255-264. 10p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Co-contaminant behavior of arsenic (As) and selenium (Se) in groundwater is examined in this study at a former lead and zinc smelting facility. We collected water quality data, including concentrations of trace metals, major ions, and metalloid speciation, over a 15-year period to document long-term trends and relationships between As, Se, geochemical parameters, and other redox-sensitive trace metals. Concentrations of dissolved As and Se were negatively correlated (Kendall's Tau B correlation coefficient, r = −0.72) and showed a distinctive L-shaped relationship. High-concentration arsenic wells (>5 mg L −1 ) were characterized by intermediate oxidation-reduction conditions (75 < Eh < 275 mV), near-neutral pH (6.1–7.9), low Ca/Na ratios, elevated Fe and Mn concentrations, and high proportions of As(III) relative to total dissolved As. High-concentration Se wells (>500 μg L −1 ) were characterized by more positive Eh (305–500 mV), low Fe concentrations, and high proportions of As(V). Batch micocosm experiments showed that aquifer solids contain mineral surfaces and/or microbial communities capable of removing selenate from groundwater. Electron microprobe and Se K -edge X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopic analyses demonstrated that Se was predominantly associated with elemental Se in the reduced aquifer solids. Factor analysis revealed three discernible groupings of trace metals. Group I includes U, Se, and nitrate-N, all of which are mobile under oxygenated to moderately oxygenated conditions. Group II includes elements that are mobile under Fe(III)-reducing conditions: Fe, total dissolved As, As(III), and ammonium-N. Group III elements (Mo, Sb, and V) showed mobility across the entire range of redox conditions encountered in site groundwater; As(V) clustered with this group of elements. Geochemical modeling suggests that As and Se species were in a state of disequilibrium with respect to measured parameters indicative of redox conditions, although predicted patterns of redox-controlled mobility and attenuation were confirmed. This analysis is important to better understand groundwater contaminant behavior in response to redox conditions ranging from oxic/suboxic to Fe(III)-reducing, but excluding sulfate-reducing conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08832927
Volume :
89
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Applied Geochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
127469526
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeochem.2017.12.011