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Emissions of Inorganic and Organic Arsenic Compounds via the Leachate Pathway from Pretreated Municipal Waste Materials: A Landfill Reactor Study
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 1877771
Author(s) Huang, Jen-How; Ilgen, Gunter; Vogel, D.; Michalzik, B.; Hantsch, S.; Tennhardt, L.; Bilitewski, B.
Author(s) at UniBasel Huang, Jen-How
Year 2009
Title Emissions of Inorganic and Organic Arsenic Compounds via the Leachate Pathway from Pretreated Municipal Waste Materials: A Landfill Reactor Study
Journal Environmental Science and Technology
Volume 43
Number 18
Pages / Article-Number 7092-7
Abstract The emission of arsenic (As) with leachate from mechanically biologically pretreated municipal solid waste (MBP-MSW) was quantified over one year using landfill simulation reactors. Arsenic mobilization and transformation processes were studied by simulating different environmental conditions (anoxic conditions with underlying soil or oxic/anoxic conditions). Amounts of mono-, di-, and trimethylated As in MBP-MSW prior to simulation were <48 μg As kg−1 and were magnified to 300−390 μg As kg−1 under anoxic conditions, whereas methylated As was undetectable in the oxic setup. The highest leachate concentrations (up to 84 μg L−1) occurred during the first four weeks of manipulation. The annual Astotal release with leachates averaged 19.6, 7.6, and 4.5 μg kg−1 under an anoxic environment with underlying soil, oxic conditions, and anoxic conditions, respectively, with 15−50% occurring as organic As. The annually released As represented 0.2−0.8% of the Astotal pool, suggesting that As mobilization from waste is a slow process. The anoxia diminished As release rates, whereas anoxic conditions with underlying soil material elevated the As mobilization, probably due to reductive dissolution of soil-derived Fe and Mn (hydr)oxides. The mass balance of methylated As in MBP-MSW and leachates before and after the treatments highlights As methylation under anoxic conditions and demethylation under oxic landfill conditions.
Publisher American Chemical Society
ISSN/ISBN 0013-936X ; 1520-5851
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/49045/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1021/es901605q
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19806747
ISI-Number 000269656200035
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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