D. Heil et al., THE COMPETITIVE-BINDING OF LEAD BY EDTA IN SOILS AND IMPLICATIONS FORHEAP LEACHING REMEDIATION, Radioactive waste management and the nuclear fuel cycle, 20(2-3), 1996, pp. 111-127
The effectiveness of removal of Pb from three contaminated alkaline so
ils and one acidic mine tailings sample by extraction with EDTA was de
termined. Experimental variables included EDTA concentration, time of
shaking, and pH. The fraction of total Pb extracted by EDTA at pH valu
es near that of the native soil or tailings ranged from less than 1% t
o nearly 90%. The fraction of EDTA which complexed Pb was decreased as
higher concentrations of EDTA were added for all three soils, with on
ly limited improvements in Pb extraction at EDTA:Pb molar ratios above
10.0. A high percentage of EDTA complexed with Ca, and to a lesser de
gree Zn, Mn, and Mg in the alkaline soils, and with Fe in the acidic t
ailings, consistent with model predictions. Decreasing the pH of the a
lkaline soils with HCl increased the removal of Pb in all cases. A sig
nificant proportion of the total lead in each of the contaminated soil
s was present in the adsorbed form, and the ability of EDTA to extract
adsorbed lead from the three soils was variable.