Remediation and immobilization of Cr(VI)-contaminated soil using stabilized nanoscale iron sulfide and ecological impact

Heliyon. 2023 Mar 29;9(4):e15009. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e15009. eCollection 2023 Apr.

Abstract

Soil contaminated with hexavalent chromium seriously threatens the environment and human health. The use of FeS, which has a high redox activity and excellent reduction capacity, limits its application in soil remediation due to its premature surface oxidation and massive aggregation. To prevent premature surface oxidation and agglomeration, cetyltrimethylammonium bromide-supported nano-ferrous sulfide (CTAB-nFeS) was chemically synthesized and used for immobilizing Cr(VI) in contaminated soil. In order to evaluate the role of CTAB stabilization of nFeS and interaction mechanisms were investigated by XPS, FTIR, XRD, and FESEM. Batch experiments showed a complete reduction of Cr(VI) within 3 h with only 235% excess of CTAB-nFeS at a soil pH of 8 compared to days as reported in the literature with alternative FeS forms. The reduction kinetic data could be satisfactorily fitted into the second-order rate model. The rate constant linearly depends on the soil-to-water ratio, but its logarithmic form is linear in the given pH range. The oxidation-reduction potential increases with decreasing initial pH, thus positively impacting the reduction process. XPS analysis revealed the reduction process as multi-steps (reduction, adsorption, and co-precipitation). Ecological studies showed improved plant growth and earthworm survival rate in the remediated soil. Medium-term stability experiments suggested a significant decrease in TCLP leachate concentration of Cr after CTAB-nFeS treatment and remained stable for 60 d. Overall results of our study suggested a sustainable, feasible, and effective strategy for in-situ remediation of Cr(VI)-contaminated soil using CTAB-nFeS at natural pH.

Keywords: CTAB-nanoFeS; Cr(VI) immobilization in soil; Cr(VI)-remediation in soil; FeS nanoparticles; TCLP of Cr in soil.