Influence of soil geochemical and physical properties on chromium(VI) sorption and bioaccessibility.

2013 
The Department of Defense (DoD) is faced with the daunting task of possible remediation of numerous soil-Cr(VI) contaminated sites throughout the continental U.S. The primary risk driver at these sites is hand-to-mouth ingestion of contaminated soil by children. In the following study we investigate the impact of soil geochemical and physical properties on the sorption and bioaccessibility of Cr(VI) in a vast array of soils relevant to neighboring DoD sites. For the 35 soils used in this study, A-horizon soils typically sorbed significantly more Cr(VI) relative to B-horizon soils. Multiple linear regression analysis suggested that Cr(VI) sorption increased with increasing soil total organic C (TOC) and decreasing soil pH. The bioaccessibility of total Cr (CrT) and Cr(VI) on the soils decreased with increasing soil TOC content. As the soil TOC content approached 0.4%, the bioaccessibility of soil bound Cr systematically decreased from approximately 65 to 10%. As the soil TOC content increased from 0.4 to 4...
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