Description

Book Synopsis
* A comprehensive overview of the origin, regulation, analysis, chemistry, fate and management of trace metals in soils. * Presents the latest advances in the field, bringing together subject matter currently dispersed across a large variety of journals.

Trade Review
"This book is very suitable for soil scientists involved in soil contamination, but also for research chemists, geochemists, agronomists, environmental scientists, ecotoxicologists, and professionals who deal with contaminated soils." (Anal Bioanal Chem, February 2011)



Table of Contents
1. Introduction

Peter S. Hooda

2.Trace Elements: General Soil Chemistry, Principles and Processes

Filip M.G. Tack

2.1 Introduction

2.2 Distribution of trace elements in the soil

2.3 Chemical species

2.4 Sorption and desorption

2.5 Precipitation and dissolution

2.6 Mobilisation of trace elements

2.7 Transport

2.8 Plant uptake

2.9 Concluding remarks

References

3. Soil Sampling and Sample Preparation

Anthony C. Edwards

3.1 Introduction

3.2 Soil sampling

3.3 Errors associated with soil sampling and preparation

3.4. Overview of the current situation

3.5 Scale and variability

3.6 Conclusions

References

4. Analysis and Fractionation of Trace Elements in Soils

Gijis Du Laing

4.1. Introduction

4.2. Total Analysis

4.3. Fractionation of Trace Elements

4.4. Species-retaining and Species-selective Leaching Techniques

4.5. Equipment for Direct Speciation of Trace Elements in Soil

4.6. Conclusions

References

5. Fractionation and Speciation of Trace Elements in Soil Solution

Gijis Du Laing

5.1. Introduction

5.2. Soil Solution Sampling, Storage and Filtration

5.3. Particle Size Fractionation

5.4. Liquid-liquid Extraction

5.5. Ion Exchange Resins and Solid Phase Extraction

5.6. Derivatisation Techniques to Create Volatile Species

5.7. Chromatographic Separation of Trace Element Species

5.8. Capillary Electrophoresis (CE)

5.9. Diffusive Gradients in Thin Films (DGT)

5.10. Ion-selective Electrodes

5.11. Donnan Membrane Technique

5.12. Voltammetric Techniques

5.13. Microelectrodes and Microsensors

5.14. Models for Predicting Metal Speciation in Soil Solution

5.15. Conclusions

References

6. Long-Term Issues, Impacts And Predictive Modelling

Weiping Chen, Andrew C. Chang, Laosheng Wu, Albert L. Page and Bonjun Koo

6.1 Introduction

6.2 Biosolids-borne Trace Elements in Soils

6.3 Assessing Availability of Trace Elements in Biosolids-amended Soils

6.4 Long-Term Availability Pool Assessment through a Root Exudates-based Model

6.5 Conclusions

References

7. Fertilizer-borne Trace Element Contaminants in Soils

Samuel P. Stacey, Mike J. McLaughlin and Ganga Hettiarachchi

7.1 Introduction

7.2. Phosphatic Fertilisers

7.3. Micronutrient Fertilisers

7. 4. Long-term Accumulation of Fertilizer-borne Trace Element Contaminants

7.5. Trace Elemental Contaminant Transfer to Crops and Grazing Animals

7.6. Conclusions

References

8. Trace Metal Exposure and Effects on Soil Dwelling Species and their Communities

David J. Spurgeon

8.1 Introduction

8.2 Hazards and Consequences of Trace Metal Exposure

8.3. Routes of Exposure, Uptake and Detoxification

8.4. Conclusions

References

9. Trace Element Deficient Soils

Rainer Schulin, Annette Johnson, and Emmanuel Frossard

9.1 Introduction

9.2. The concept of trace element deficient soils

9.3. Methods to identify and map soil trace element deficiencies

9.4. Soil factors associated with trace element deficiencies

9.5. Treatment of soils deficient in trace elements

References

10. Application of Chemical Speciation Modelling to Studies on Toxic Element Behaviour in Soils

Les J. Evans, Sarah J. Barabash, David G. Lumsdon and Xueyuan Gu

10.1. Introduction

10.2. The structure of chemical speciation models

10.3. The species/component matrix

10.4. Aqueous Speciation Modeling

10.5. Surface Complexation Modeling to Mineral Surfaces

10.6. Surface Complexation Modelling to Soil Organic Matter

10.7. Discussion

References

Bioavailability, Risk Assessment and Remediation

11. Assessing Bioavailability of Soil Trace Elements

Peter S. Hooda

11.1. Introduction

11.2. Speciation, Bioavailability and Bioaccumulation – Definitions and Concepts

11.3. Bioavailability Assessment Approaches

11.4.Discussion and Conclusions

References

Bioavailability: Exposure, Dose and Risk Assessment

12. Assessing Bioavailability of Soil Trace Elements

Rupert L. Hough

12.1 Introduction

12.2 Hazard Identification

12.3. Exposure Assessment

12.4. Dose-Response

12.5. Risk Characterisation

12.6 Assessment of mixtures and disparate risks

12.7 Conclusions

References

13. Regulatory Limits for Trace Elements in Soils

Graham Merrington, Sohel Saikat and Albania Grosso

13.1. Introduction

13.2. Derivation of regulatory limits for trace elements

13.3. National and international initiatives in setting limit values

13.4. Forward look

13.5. Conclusions

14 Phytoremediation of Soil Trace ElementsRufus L. Chaney, C. Leigh Broadhurst and Tiziana Centofanti

14.1. Introduction

14.2. Nature of soil contamination where phytoextraction may be applied

14.3. Need for metal tolerant hyperaccumulators for practical phytoextraction

14.4. Phytoremediation strategies – applications and limitations

14.5. Phytostabilization of Zn-Pb, Cu, or Ni mine waste or smelter contaminated soils

14.6. Recovery of elements from phytoextraction biomass

14.7. Risks to wildlife during phytoextraction operations?

14.8 Conclusions

References

15. Trace Element Immobilization in Soil Using Amendments

Jurate Kumpiene

15.1 Introduction

15.2 Soil Amendments for Trace Element Immobilization

15.3 Method Acceptance

15.4 Concluding remarks

References

Characteristics and Behaviour of Individual Elements

16. Arsenic and Antimony

Yuji Arai

16.1. Introduction

16.2. Geogenic Occurrence

16.3. Sources of Soil Contamination

16.4. Chemical Behaviour in Soils

16.5 Arsenic retention in soils

16.6 Risks from As and Sb in Soils

16.7 Conclusions and Future Research Needs

References

17. Cadmium and Zinc

Rufus L. Chaney

17.1. Introduction

17.2. Geogenic occurrence and sources of soil contamination

17.3. Chemical behavior in soils

17.4. Plant accumulation of soil Cd and Zn

17.5. Risk implications for Cd in soil amendments

17.6. Plant uptake of Cd and Zn in relation to food-chain Cd risk

17.7. Food-chain Zn issues

References

18. Copper and Lead

Rupert L. Hough

18.1 Introduction

18.2. Copper

18.3. Lead

18.4. Risks from copper and lead

18.5 Concluding remarks

References

19. Chromium, Cobalt and Nickel

Yibing Ma and Peter S. Hooda

19.1. Introduction

19.2. Geogenic Occurrences

19.3. Sources of Soil Contamination

19.4. Chemical Behaviour in Soils

19.5. Environmental and Human Heath Risks

19.6. Concluding Remarks

References

20. Manganese and Selenium

Zhenli L. He, Jiali Shentu, and Xiao E. Yang

20.1 Introduction

20.2 Concentrations and Sources of Mn and Se in soils

20.3. Chemical Behavior of Mn and Se in soils

20.4. Effects on Plant, Animal and human Health

References

21. Tin and Mercury

Martin J. Clifford, Gavin M. Hilson and Mark E. Hodson

20.1. Introduction

21.2. Geogenic Occurrence

21.3. Sources of Soil Contamination

21.4. Chemical Behaviour in Soils

21.5. Risks from Tin and Mercury in Soils

References

22. Molybdenum, Silver, Thallium,and Vanadium

Les J. Evans and Sarah J. Barabash

22.1. Introduction

22.2. Molybdenum

22.3. Silver

22.4. Thallium

22.5. Vanadium

22.6. Environmental and Human Health Risks

References

23. Gold and Uranium

Ian D. Pulford

23.1. Introduction

23.2. Geogenic Occurrence

23.3. Soil Contamination

23.4. Chemical Behaviour in Soils

23.5. Risks from Gold and Uranium in Soils

23.6. Concluding Comments

References

24. Platinum Group Elements in Soil

F. Zereini and C.L.S. Wiseman

24.1. Introduction

24.2. Sources of PGE in soils

24.3. Emissions, Depositional Behavior and Concentrations in Soils

24.4. Geochemical Behaviour in Soils

24.5. Bioavailability

24.6. Conclusions

References

Trace Elements in Soils

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    A Hardback by Peter Hooda

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      View other formats and editions of Trace Elements in Soils by Peter Hooda

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 16/04/2010
      ISBN13: 9781405160377, 978-1405160377
      ISBN10: 1405160373

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      * A comprehensive overview of the origin, regulation, analysis, chemistry, fate and management of trace metals in soils. * Presents the latest advances in the field, bringing together subject matter currently dispersed across a large variety of journals.

      Trade Review
      "This book is very suitable for soil scientists involved in soil contamination, but also for research chemists, geochemists, agronomists, environmental scientists, ecotoxicologists, and professionals who deal with contaminated soils." (Anal Bioanal Chem, February 2011)



      Table of Contents
      1. Introduction

      Peter S. Hooda

      2.Trace Elements: General Soil Chemistry, Principles and Processes

      Filip M.G. Tack

      2.1 Introduction

      2.2 Distribution of trace elements in the soil

      2.3 Chemical species

      2.4 Sorption and desorption

      2.5 Precipitation and dissolution

      2.6 Mobilisation of trace elements

      2.7 Transport

      2.8 Plant uptake

      2.9 Concluding remarks

      References

      3. Soil Sampling and Sample Preparation

      Anthony C. Edwards

      3.1 Introduction

      3.2 Soil sampling

      3.3 Errors associated with soil sampling and preparation

      3.4. Overview of the current situation

      3.5 Scale and variability

      3.6 Conclusions

      References

      4. Analysis and Fractionation of Trace Elements in Soils

      Gijis Du Laing

      4.1. Introduction

      4.2. Total Analysis

      4.3. Fractionation of Trace Elements

      4.4. Species-retaining and Species-selective Leaching Techniques

      4.5. Equipment for Direct Speciation of Trace Elements in Soil

      4.6. Conclusions

      References

      5. Fractionation and Speciation of Trace Elements in Soil Solution

      Gijis Du Laing

      5.1. Introduction

      5.2. Soil Solution Sampling, Storage and Filtration

      5.3. Particle Size Fractionation

      5.4. Liquid-liquid Extraction

      5.5. Ion Exchange Resins and Solid Phase Extraction

      5.6. Derivatisation Techniques to Create Volatile Species

      5.7. Chromatographic Separation of Trace Element Species

      5.8. Capillary Electrophoresis (CE)

      5.9. Diffusive Gradients in Thin Films (DGT)

      5.10. Ion-selective Electrodes

      5.11. Donnan Membrane Technique

      5.12. Voltammetric Techniques

      5.13. Microelectrodes and Microsensors

      5.14. Models for Predicting Metal Speciation in Soil Solution

      5.15. Conclusions

      References

      6. Long-Term Issues, Impacts And Predictive Modelling

      Weiping Chen, Andrew C. Chang, Laosheng Wu, Albert L. Page and Bonjun Koo

      6.1 Introduction

      6.2 Biosolids-borne Trace Elements in Soils

      6.3 Assessing Availability of Trace Elements in Biosolids-amended Soils

      6.4 Long-Term Availability Pool Assessment through a Root Exudates-based Model

      6.5 Conclusions

      References

      7. Fertilizer-borne Trace Element Contaminants in Soils

      Samuel P. Stacey, Mike J. McLaughlin and Ganga Hettiarachchi

      7.1 Introduction

      7.2. Phosphatic Fertilisers

      7.3. Micronutrient Fertilisers

      7. 4. Long-term Accumulation of Fertilizer-borne Trace Element Contaminants

      7.5. Trace Elemental Contaminant Transfer to Crops and Grazing Animals

      7.6. Conclusions

      References

      8. Trace Metal Exposure and Effects on Soil Dwelling Species and their Communities

      David J. Spurgeon

      8.1 Introduction

      8.2 Hazards and Consequences of Trace Metal Exposure

      8.3. Routes of Exposure, Uptake and Detoxification

      8.4. Conclusions

      References

      9. Trace Element Deficient Soils

      Rainer Schulin, Annette Johnson, and Emmanuel Frossard

      9.1 Introduction

      9.2. The concept of trace element deficient soils

      9.3. Methods to identify and map soil trace element deficiencies

      9.4. Soil factors associated with trace element deficiencies

      9.5. Treatment of soils deficient in trace elements

      References

      10. Application of Chemical Speciation Modelling to Studies on Toxic Element Behaviour in Soils

      Les J. Evans, Sarah J. Barabash, David G. Lumsdon and Xueyuan Gu

      10.1. Introduction

      10.2. The structure of chemical speciation models

      10.3. The species/component matrix

      10.4. Aqueous Speciation Modeling

      10.5. Surface Complexation Modeling to Mineral Surfaces

      10.6. Surface Complexation Modelling to Soil Organic Matter

      10.7. Discussion

      References

      Bioavailability, Risk Assessment and Remediation

      11. Assessing Bioavailability of Soil Trace Elements

      Peter S. Hooda

      11.1. Introduction

      11.2. Speciation, Bioavailability and Bioaccumulation – Definitions and Concepts

      11.3. Bioavailability Assessment Approaches

      11.4.Discussion and Conclusions

      References

      Bioavailability: Exposure, Dose and Risk Assessment

      12. Assessing Bioavailability of Soil Trace Elements

      Rupert L. Hough

      12.1 Introduction

      12.2 Hazard Identification

      12.3. Exposure Assessment

      12.4. Dose-Response

      12.5. Risk Characterisation

      12.6 Assessment of mixtures and disparate risks

      12.7 Conclusions

      References

      13. Regulatory Limits for Trace Elements in Soils

      Graham Merrington, Sohel Saikat and Albania Grosso

      13.1. Introduction

      13.2. Derivation of regulatory limits for trace elements

      13.3. National and international initiatives in setting limit values

      13.4. Forward look

      13.5. Conclusions

      14 Phytoremediation of Soil Trace ElementsRufus L. Chaney, C. Leigh Broadhurst and Tiziana Centofanti

      14.1. Introduction

      14.2. Nature of soil contamination where phytoextraction may be applied

      14.3. Need for metal tolerant hyperaccumulators for practical phytoextraction

      14.4. Phytoremediation strategies – applications and limitations

      14.5. Phytostabilization of Zn-Pb, Cu, or Ni mine waste or smelter contaminated soils

      14.6. Recovery of elements from phytoextraction biomass

      14.7. Risks to wildlife during phytoextraction operations?

      14.8 Conclusions

      References

      15. Trace Element Immobilization in Soil Using Amendments

      Jurate Kumpiene

      15.1 Introduction

      15.2 Soil Amendments for Trace Element Immobilization

      15.3 Method Acceptance

      15.4 Concluding remarks

      References

      Characteristics and Behaviour of Individual Elements

      16. Arsenic and Antimony

      Yuji Arai

      16.1. Introduction

      16.2. Geogenic Occurrence

      16.3. Sources of Soil Contamination

      16.4. Chemical Behaviour in Soils

      16.5 Arsenic retention in soils

      16.6 Risks from As and Sb in Soils

      16.7 Conclusions and Future Research Needs

      References

      17. Cadmium and Zinc

      Rufus L. Chaney

      17.1. Introduction

      17.2. Geogenic occurrence and sources of soil contamination

      17.3. Chemical behavior in soils

      17.4. Plant accumulation of soil Cd and Zn

      17.5. Risk implications for Cd in soil amendments

      17.6. Plant uptake of Cd and Zn in relation to food-chain Cd risk

      17.7. Food-chain Zn issues

      References

      18. Copper and Lead

      Rupert L. Hough

      18.1 Introduction

      18.2. Copper

      18.3. Lead

      18.4. Risks from copper and lead

      18.5 Concluding remarks

      References

      19. Chromium, Cobalt and Nickel

      Yibing Ma and Peter S. Hooda

      19.1. Introduction

      19.2. Geogenic Occurrences

      19.3. Sources of Soil Contamination

      19.4. Chemical Behaviour in Soils

      19.5. Environmental and Human Heath Risks

      19.6. Concluding Remarks

      References

      20. Manganese and Selenium

      Zhenli L. He, Jiali Shentu, and Xiao E. Yang

      20.1 Introduction

      20.2 Concentrations and Sources of Mn and Se in soils

      20.3. Chemical Behavior of Mn and Se in soils

      20.4. Effects on Plant, Animal and human Health

      References

      21. Tin and Mercury

      Martin J. Clifford, Gavin M. Hilson and Mark E. Hodson

      20.1. Introduction

      21.2. Geogenic Occurrence

      21.3. Sources of Soil Contamination

      21.4. Chemical Behaviour in Soils

      21.5. Risks from Tin and Mercury in Soils

      References

      22. Molybdenum, Silver, Thallium,and Vanadium

      Les J. Evans and Sarah J. Barabash

      22.1. Introduction

      22.2. Molybdenum

      22.3. Silver

      22.4. Thallium

      22.5. Vanadium

      22.6. Environmental and Human Health Risks

      References

      23. Gold and Uranium

      Ian D. Pulford

      23.1. Introduction

      23.2. Geogenic Occurrence

      23.3. Soil Contamination

      23.4. Chemical Behaviour in Soils

      23.5. Risks from Gold and Uranium in Soils

      23.6. Concluding Comments

      References

      24. Platinum Group Elements in Soil

      F. Zereini and C.L.S. Wiseman

      24.1. Introduction

      24.2. Sources of PGE in soils

      24.3. Emissions, Depositional Behavior and Concentrations in Soils

      24.4. Geochemical Behaviour in Soils

      24.5. Bioavailability

      24.6. Conclusions

      References

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