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Bioaccessibility and human health risks of arsenic from geological origin in lateritic red soil on construction land.

Authors :
Ding, Lu-Yao
Tang, Guang-Yong
Chen, Ming-Zhu
Wang, Fo-Peng
Wang, Jun-Feng
Ye, Han-Jie
Li, Qu-Sheng
Source :
Chemosphere. Jun2024, Vol. 358, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Current human health risk assessments of soil arsenic (As) contamination rarely consider bioaccessibility (IVBA), which may overestimate the health risks of soil As. The IVBA of As (As-IVBA) may differ among various soil types. This investigation of As-IVBA focused As from geological origin in a typical subtropical soil, lateritic red soil, and its risk control values. The study used the SBRC gastric phase in vitro digestion method and As speciation sequential extraction based upon phosphorus speciation extraction method. Two construction land sites (CH and HD sites) in the Pearl River Delta region were surveyed. The results revealed a high content of residual As (including scorodite, mansfieldite, orpiment, realgar, and aluminum arsenite) in the lateritic red soils at both sites (CH: 84.9%, HD: 91.7%). The content of adsorbed aluminum arsenate (CH: 3.24%, HD: 0.228%), adsorbed ferrum arsenate (CH: 8.55%, HD: 5.01%), and calcium arsenate (CH: 7.33%, HD: 3.01%) were found to be low. The bioaccessible As content was significantly positively correlated with the As content in adsorbed aluminum arsenate, adsorbed ferrum arsenate, and calcium arsenate. A small portion of these sequential extractable As speciation could be absorbed by the human body (CH: 14.9%, HD: 3.16%), posing a certain health risk. Adsorbed aluminum arsenate had the highest IVBA, followed by calcium arsenate, and adsorbed ferrum arsenate had the lowest IVBA. The aforementioned speciation characteristics of As from geological origin in lateritic red soil contributed to its lower IVBA compared to other soils. The oxidation state of As did not significantly affect As-IVBA. Based on As-IVBA, the carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic risks of soil As in the CH and HD sites decreased greatly in human health risk assessment. The results suggest that As-IVBA in lateritic red soil should be considered when assessing human health risks on construction land. [Display omitted] • In lateritic red soil, As from geological origin has low bioaccessibility. • SBET can mainly extract the adsorbed arsenate on Al, Fe and Ca arsenate. • The bioaccessibility of soil As is not related to its oxidation state. • The occurrence of As in Lateritic red soil is dominated by low solubility minerals. • Soil remediation target values can be significantly promoted based on As-IVBA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00456535
Volume :
358
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177248270
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.142192