Investigation of pore water and soil extraction tests for characterizing the fate of poorly soluble metal-oxide nanoparticles

Chemosphere. 2021 Mar:267:128885. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.128885. Epub 2020 Nov 6.

Abstract

Here we compared the efficiency of Cu extraction (dissolved + particulate) from two soils dosed with CuO nanoparticles (NPs) at 50 or 250 mg kg-1 by pore water collection, and single- and multi-step soil extraction tests. Pore water collection recovered low levels of Cu (<0.18%, regardless of soil type or Cu dose). Single soil extraction by either CaCl2 or DI water led to higher Cu recovery than pore water collection, but still <3% of total dose. These methods were useful for assessing the labile Cu ions pool. This fraction is controlled by Cu2+ dissolved from CuO NPs and it varies with time and soil type. Particulate Cu was poorly retrieved (<0.7%) by pore water extraction and by single-step soil extraction using CaCl2 solution or water. Multi-step extraction including dispersing and metal-chelating agents allowed for simultaneous characterization of dissolved Cu (total ionic Cu2+, 24-49% of dosed Cu), extractable CuO NPs (reversibly attached, 15-26% of dosed Cu), and non-extractable CuO NPs (irreversibly attached, 36-50% of dosed Cu), and it could describe the aging of NPs along 30 d. This method extracted a significantly higher concentration of Cu than pore water collection and was less sensitive to method parameters (e.g. filtration). This multi-step method can reduce pore water extraction-related factors that may confound the interpretation of environmental exposure data in NPs studies, and describe upper limits of both exchangeable Cu2+ and dispersible CuO NPs in soil that can potentially become bioavailable to plants and organisms and thus provide a sounder basis for risks evaluations.

Keywords: Attachment; Dissolution; Multi-step extraction test; Nano-enabled agrochemicals.

MeSH terms

  • Copper
  • Metal Nanoparticles*
  • Nanoparticles*
  • Oxides
  • Soil
  • Soil Pollutants* / analysis
  • Water

Substances

  • Oxides
  • Soil
  • Soil Pollutants
  • Water
  • Copper