INTRODUCTION
Trace metal pollution is a frequent anthropogenic impact affecting the soil quality, which can imply environmental and human health risks due to trace metal toxicity, e.g. associated to negative effects on soil fauna, contamination of agricultural production and deterioration of surface and groundwater quality (Wang et al. 2001, García-Guinea et al. 2010, Santos et al. 2014, 2017, Cui et al. 2016). However, total or pseudo-total concentrations do not allow an accurate estimate of these risks (Dungan and Dees 2009, Soares et al. 2009, 2017, 2018, Prica et al. 2010), and the information on metal contaminants mobility and toxicity to organisms is largely desirable to improve soil management decisions (Kede et al. 2008, 2014, Fontes and Santos 2010).
A large number of metal partial extraction procedures have been reported in the literature (e.g., Rao et al. 2008, Perlatti et al. 2016, Soares et al. 2018, Weber et al. 2018), while single leaching procedures are generally used to define mobility and toxicity of pollutants in soils, sediments and waste materials (Kede et al. 2008, Prica et al. 2010, Ahmad et al. 2012). One of these procedures is the Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure (TCLP) proposed by the US Environmental Protection Agency (US-EPA 1992), which has been frequently adopted due to its ability to simulate the effect of wastes interactions with low molecular weight organic acids that can mobilize toxic trace metals (Lima and Bernárdez 2011, Macías et al. 2012, Sethurajan et al. 2016).
As an example of a critical case of soil exposure to metal contamination due to multiple anthropogenic sources, the Centro Tecnológico de Resíduos (CENTRES), located in the Rio de Janeiro State, southeastern Brazil, operated between 1987 and 1998 as a provisional storage area of industrial wastes that were not adequately managed (Santos et al. 2014, Soares et al. 2017, 2018). Despite the restrictions established by environmental licensing policies, CENTRES rented part of its area for a waste treatment plant contaminated by askarel in 1991 (Santos et al. 2014, Soares et al. 2017, 2018), besides contamination by other products of high toxicity, such as tetraethyl lead and diverse industrial metal refuses (Pinto 2002, Soares et al. 2018). Consequently, the CENTRES soils present pseudo-total concentrations of copper, nickel, lead and zinc exceeding the limits established by the Brazilian legislation (CONAMA 2009), implying a soil classification as highly degraded that requires immediate remediation (Soares et al. 2018).
This study aims to apply the TCLP approach for Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn in soils from the CENTRES area, after more than 20 years of industrial waste pollution, comparing data from a pollution hotspot with nearby sites within this area. In this sense, the same samples previously analyzed for metal pseudo-total concentrations by Soares et al. (2018) were analyzed to perform a TCLP-based assessment of metal mobility and toxicity risks in surface soil columns.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
Study area
The study area (22º 42’ 57” S, 43º 33’18” W) features a hot and humid climate (Aw) according to the Köppen classification. It has yellow clay soils, predominantly with sandy clay loam texture, strong drainage and mineralogical assemblage consisting of quartz, kaolinite, muscovite, illite, halloysite and vermiculite (Soares et al. 2018). Figure 1 indicates the positions of sampling sites (P1 to P7). These soils have a pH(H2O) range from acidic to near neutral (3.8 to 6.9), with low total organic carbon contents (TOC = 6 to 41 g/kg) and low cation exchange capacity (CEC = 6.4 to 11.2 cmolc/dm) for all sites (Soares et al. 2018).
Sampling
Seven samples of surface soils (0-10 cm) from the CENTRES storage area were collected in triplicate (samples P1 to P7; Fig. 1). To evaluate a possible migration of metal pollutants into deeper soil layers, additional triplicate samples were collected from two subsurface depth intervals (10-20 and 20-30 cm) from the last three sampling stations mentioned above. These subsurface samples were identified as P5.1, P6.1 and P7.1 (10-20 cm) and P5.2, P6.2 and P7.2 (20-30 cm). Soil sampling was carried out following the procedures suggested by the Brazilian Society of Soil Sciences (Santos et al. 2013). All samples are characterized as urban soils, except for P4, which was chosen as control, considering its location at a more elevated position without exposure to hazardous materials.
The soil samples were oven dried under artificial air circulation at a temperature of 45 ºC for 24 h and sieved in a 2.0 mm mesh. The soil fractions not retained on the sieve, which corresponded to the thin air-dried soil, were macerated until a homogeneously fine texture was obtained.
US-EPA Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure
This study adopted the US-EPA Method 1311, as modified by Kede et al. (2008) for the TCLP application. Soil subsamples of about 2.5 g were submitted to agitation for 18 h at room temperature in an acetic-acetate pH buffer solution (pH = 4.93 ± 0.05), resulting in a final volume of 50 mL. According to US-EPA (1992), results exceeding the thresholds of 1.0 mg/L for Cd and 5.0 mg/L for Pb and Cr in the obtained extractions are considered hazardous.
Determination of metal concentrations by ICP-OES
The concentrations of Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn in soil extracts were determined using an inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometer (ICP-OES) Horiba Jobin Yvon model Ultima 2. Analytical detection limits (DL) were calculated according to the equation:
where s is the standard deviation of 10 white determinations and b is the slope of the calibration curve (Soares et al. 2009). The obtained DLs were 0.005 ± 0.001 mg/L (Cd), 0.010 ± 0.001 mg/L (Cr), 0.010 ± 0.003 mg/L (Cu), 0.010 ± 0.002 mg/L (Ni), 0.010 ± 0.002 mg/L (Pb), and 0.015 ± 0.006 mg/L (Zn).
Statistical analysis
In order to verify the existence of significant differences in the results, an analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by a Tukey test was carried out. The possible associations between concentrations of different metals were evaluated by Pearson correlation tests. Statistical analyses were performed using the software Statistica v. 7.0.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The retention or mobilization of metals in soils may involve physical (e.g., filtration, diffusion, dispersion, dilution and absorption), chemical (e.g., precipitation/dissolution, adsorption/desorption, redox reactions, of complexation and cationic exchange), and biological (e.g., aerobic and anaerobic transformations) mechanisms (Sposito 2016, Alloway 2012, Kabata-Pendias and Pendias 2011). Considering that most samples had metal concentrations significantly above those obtained in the control sample (site P4) (Tukey test, p < 0.05, Fig. 2), a higher metal mobility than under control soil conditions was clearly evidenced by the TCLP results. This evidences that the mechanisms cited above may be significantly affected by anthropogenic influences, as reflected by a different mobility of anthropogenic metal loadings within soils.
An anthropogenic alteration in metal mobility was also noted by Wang et al. (2001) in soils of an area used as a storage yard during more than 10 years for a scrap metal company in the South of Taiwan, where very high TCLP concentrations were found (3.2 mg/L for Cd, 136 mg/L for Cu, 8.6 mg/L for Ni, 589 mg/L for Pb and 1576 mg/L for Zn). Also, Ahmad et al. (2012) assessed lead contamination in neutral soils (pH = 6.5) from a military shooting area in South Korea and found concentrations of this metal about eight times above the US-EPA’s regulatory TCLP value (5 mg/L).
Trace metal enrichment factors (EF) in relation to control soil values are certainly expected to be high in industrial areas. For example, industrial areas from Northwest China presented Ca EF exceeding 10, in relation to soil background (Li et al. 2013). In the study sites, for almost all metals (except Cr), the anthropogenically-affected TCLP results reached values one or two orders of magnitude higher than those from the control site, while Cu reached enrichments of four orders of magnitude and Pb reached enrichments of five orders of magnitude (Fig. 3). The high EFs observed are clear effects of anthropogenic interventions in the study area, particularly for station P5, but the concentrations of Cd and Cr are still below the respective TCLP regulatory values of US-EPA (1999). On the other hand, an unknown degree of metal transfer to deeper soil layers than those studied here, along the previous two decades, may possibly also contribute to explain the observed results.
A comparison of concentrations obtained in the TCLP test (Fig. 2) with the regulatory level from US-EPA for Pb (5 mg/L) shows that concentrations of this metal in samples P5, P5.1 and P5.2 exceeded the regulatory level by 67, 76 and 38 times, respectively. Moreover, results from these samples were significantly above those from other sampling sites (Tukey test, p < 0.05; Fig. 2). The concentrations of Pb obtained in this contamination hotspot exceed those of soil samples contaminated during 33 years by a factory that produced lead ingots at Santo Amaro Municipality, Bahia State, Brazil (Kede et al. 2014, 2016, Santos et al. 2017). Therefore, these samples are considered to be highly mobile and toxic in relation to Pb (Vann et al. 2006, Kede et al. 2014, 2016, Santos et al. 2017). This finding implies that the hotspot soil under study should be subject to final disposal regulations in industrial landfills for hazardous waste (US-EPA 1999, Lestan and Zapusek 2009, Prica et al. 2010, Yin et al. 2010, Macías et al. 2012, Cui et al. 2016).
Deep Pb migration in the contaminated soils can result in potential toxicological risk to groundwater (Dungan and Dees 2009). As a result, soil remediation is necessary in response to the evidenced environmental risks, considering the downward migration of Pb evidenced by the results from site P5 (Fig. 3). Alves et al. (2013)) showed that even for waste foundry sands, which are mostly not hazardous, TCLP values may reach levels up to one order of magnitude higher than the groundwater maximum level preconized by Brazilian regulations for Pb (0.01 mg/L; CONAMA 2009). In the case of CENTRES area, the maximum TCLP values for this metal suggest that downward dispersion of an anthropogenic loading four orders of magnitude higher than this ground water quality threshold is susceptible to occur.
Chen et al. (2002) study also demonstrated that Pb extracted by TCLP from surface soils under a riffle/pistol shooting range in Florida also exceeded the values for hazardous waste provided by the US-EPA. The authors concluded that the leaching of Pb was controlled by the precipitation/dissolution reactions in the soil and that adsorption did not play an effective role in controlling the leaching of Pb. An analogous interpretation is valid for the present study on soils from the CENTRES area.
The mobility of metals depends on the extent that the retention of these elements by solid phase sorption sites compensate their removal by solvents (Lestan and Zapusek 2009). It is documented that lead naturally has low mobility in soils as a result of its ability to form stable inner sphere complexes (Sposito 2016, Alloway 2012, Kabata-Pendias and Pendias 2011). However, the results of this study indicate that, after more than 20 years of contamination, the solid phases from site P5 surface soil were not able to retain such high Pb concentrations in strongly-bound forms, allowing its release from low-energy sites under the TCLP’s slightly acidic conditions.
Tropical soils are generally composed of low activity clays (dominated by kaolinite) and have relatively low concentrations of organic matter and acidic pH, as observed in the study area (Soares et al. 2018), contributing to explain the results of this study. Additionally, kaolinite and similar clay minerals are not able to result in efficient sorption of metals because of their low CEC, in contrast with the smectites and montmorillonites which are significantly more efficient as adsorbents in temperate soils (Fontes and Santos 2010, Ettler et al. 2011).
CONCLUSIONS
This evaluation of Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn potential mobility in soils from the CENTRES area revealed concentrations largely exceeding those from a control site. Results showed the following order of decreasing TCLP concentrations: Pb > Zn > Cu > Ni > Cd > Cr. Cu and Pb reached enrichments factors corresponding to four and five orders of magnitude above the control soil values, respectively. The toxicity risks assessment for Cd, Cr and Pb, based on TCLP assumptions, demonstrated a severe impact by inadequate storage of industrial wastes in relation to Pb in a contamination hotspot within the study area, with TCLP results up to 76 times higher than the respective regulation value. The TCLP results for Pb reached levels above 300 mg/L in this hotspot. On the other hand, Cd (up to 0.8 mg/L) and Cr (up to 0.3 mg/L) results were below the TCLP regulatory values. The analysis of surface soil profiles (0-30 cm depth) evidenced that downward dispersion of Pb is of major concern in the hotspot site. This mobilization susceptibility of hazardous levels of Pb implies major environmental concerns and requests the treatment of the hotspot soil as a hazardous waste. This risk may be accentuated by other metals (such as Cu, Cd, Ni and Zn) that have no threshold values stablished by the US-EPA TCLP, but also presented elevated concentrations downward.