Washing Procedure with Several Reagents for Ecological Rehabilitation of Soil Polluted with Heavy Metals
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Soil Sampling and Analyzing
2.2. Preparation of Extraction Solutions
2.3. Metal Extraction
3. Results
3.1. Soil Characterization
3.2. Metal Extraction from Soil
3.2.1. Individual Metal Extraction
3.2.2. Transport Phenomena and Extraction Mechanisms
3.2.3. Chemical Species and pH Influence
3.2.4. Cost–Benefit Analysis
- -
- for Pb extraction, the yield increases over 100 times using humus-based extraction solutions, over 30 times when using 1% malic acid and 1% gluconic acid solutions, and approximately 2.8 and 9 times when using h3% malic acid and 3% gluconic acid solutions, respectively.
- -
- for Cu extraction, the yield increases 90–100 times using humus-based extraction solutions, and 4 times using a 1% gluconic acid-based extraction solution, but with unsatisfactory results for the other extraction solutions.
- -
- good and very good values are also recorded in the case of Zn extraction, with humus-based extraction solutions and 1% malic acid again standing out, achieving yields 7–8 times better than the other extraction solutions.
- -
- the extraction yield of Cd and Cr maintains an improving trend more than the increase in costs (>2), within the range of 3.9–15. The yield obtained with a 1:8 ratio was 9 times higher compared to a 1:4 ratio, the only exception being in the case of Cd extraction with a 3% malic acid solution (1.95 times).
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Washing Agent | Reported Removal Efficiency (%) | Optimal pH Range | Observations/Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Humic substances | Zn, Pb: 15% Cu, Cd, Cr: 20–40% | 6–8 | high affinity for Pb2+ and Cu2+; adsorption capacity increases with pH | [7,10,16,20,21,29,35,36,37] |
| Malic acid | Zn, Pb, Cr: 50–88% Cd: 1.9–60% Cu: 5% | 3–7 | efficient, biodegradable; pH strongly affects metal mobility; low cost | [1,14,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,33,38,39,40,41] |
| Gluconic acid | Pb, Cu: 62–80% Zn, Cd, Cr: 34–60% | 7–9 | non-toxic polyhydroxycarboxylic acid; effective at alkaline pH | [1,29,30,31,32,33] |
| pH [-] | Ammonium Nitrogen N [ppm] | Potassium K [ppm] | Phosphorus P [ppm] | Humus [%] | Organic Carbon [%] | Electrical Conductivity [μs/cm] | Salinity [PSU] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6.5 ± 0.1 | 14.87 ± 0.8 | 14.45 ± 0.7 | 23.06 ± 1.0 | 2.5 ± 0.2 | 1.7 ± 0.1 | 1100 ± 50 | 2.1 ± 0.1 |
| Metal | Washing Agent | Observations | Optimal Time | Maximum Yield (%) | Yield (%) Other Authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pb | Humus | Lowest extraction; reduced solubilization | n/a | 0.1% | 19% [29] |
| Malic acid | Rapid extraction; 3% max ~26 mg/L at 4 h | 4 h | 1.4% | 50–89% [14,29] | |
| Gluconic acid | Slower extraction; 3% significant after 6 h (~11 mg/L) | 6–8 h | 0.3–1.2% | 30% [29] 66–80% [33] | |
| Cu | Humus | 1% constant ~3.4 mg/L; 3% slightly higher after 6–8 h | 8 h | 2% | 20–40% [9,10,16] 15% [35] 5–28% [36] |
| Malic acid | 3% most effective ~4.1 mg/L; Progressive mobilization | 8 h | 2.45% | 3–5% [49] | |
| Gluconic acid | Gradual increase; 6–8 h ~3.5–3.6 mg/L | 8 h | 2% | 62–80% [33] | |
| Zn | Humus | 1%: 4 → 8 mg/L; 3%: slower, max ~6 mg/L | 8 h | 8.3–11.4% | 13% [35] |
| Malic acid | Most efficient; stable ~16–17 mg/L | 8 h | 24–26% | 60% [33] | |
| Gluconic acid | Increase after 6–8 h; 3% max ~14–15 mg/L | 8 h | 20–24% | 45% [33] | |
| Cd | Humus | Low mobility; ≤0.22 mg/L | 8 h | 54–60% | 25% [10] 20–70% [36] 35–75% [62] |
| Malic acid | Moderate extraction; 1% > 3% | 8 h | 51–77% | 60% [33] 1.9–60% [40,41] | |
| Gluconic acid | Most favorable; 3% max 0.42 mg/L | 8 h | 63–91% | 34% [29] 48–63% [33] | |
| Cr | Humus | Stable ~3.2–3.4 mg/L | 8 h | 75–78% | 23–31% [37] |
| Malic acid | Lowest values (~3.2 mg/L) | 6 h | 40–48% | 70% [63] | |
| Gluconic acid | High initial extraction (~2.5–3 mg/L) | 8 h | 61–63% | 39–60% [33] |
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Sur, I.M.; Prodan, V.C.; Micle, V.; Nasui, M.; Hegyi, A.; Pop, V.S.; Scurtu, L.I. Washing Procedure with Several Reagents for Ecological Rehabilitation of Soil Polluted with Heavy Metals. Soil Syst. 2025, 9, 130. https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems9040130
Sur IM, Prodan VC, Micle V, Nasui M, Hegyi A, Pop VS, Scurtu LI. Washing Procedure with Several Reagents for Ecological Rehabilitation of Soil Polluted with Heavy Metals. Soil Systems. 2025; 9(4):130. https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems9040130
Chicago/Turabian StyleSur, Ioana Monica, Vasile Calin Prodan, Valer Micle, Mircea Nasui, Andreea Hegyi, Veronica Simona Pop, and Liviu Iacob Scurtu. 2025. "Washing Procedure with Several Reagents for Ecological Rehabilitation of Soil Polluted with Heavy Metals" Soil Systems 9, no. 4: 130. https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems9040130
APA StyleSur, I. M., Prodan, V. C., Micle, V., Nasui, M., Hegyi, A., Pop, V. S., & Scurtu, L. I. (2025). Washing Procedure with Several Reagents for Ecological Rehabilitation of Soil Polluted with Heavy Metals. Soil Systems, 9(4), 130. https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems9040130

