Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6309158 | Chemosphere | 2014 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Sandy loam soil polluted with heavy metals (As, Cu, Pb and Zn) from an ancient Mediterranean Pb mining and metallurgy site was treated by means of wet high-intensity magnetic separation to remove some of the pollutants therein. The treated fractions were chemically analysed and then subjected to magnetic characterisation, which determined the high-field specific (mass), magnetic susceptibility (κ) and the specific (mass) saturation magnetisation (ÏS), through isothermal remanent magnetisation (IRM) curves. From the specific values of κ and ÏS, a new expression to assess the performance of the magnetic separation operation was formulated and verified by comparison with the results obtained by traditional chemical analysis. The magnetic study provided valuable information for the exhaustive explanation of the operation, and the deduced mathematical expression was found to be appropriate to estimate the performance of the separation operation. From these results we determined that magnetic soil washing was effective for the treatment of the contaminated soil, concentrating the majority of the heavy metals and peaking its separation capacity at 60% of the maximum output voltage.
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Authors
C. Sierra, D. MartÃnez-Blanco, Jesús A. Blanco, J.R. Gallego,