Temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in New-Caledonia
Compost produced from municipal wastewater sludges and green wastes (MWSC) is a promising way for recycling wastewater sludges and for improving agricultural production. During the composting, organic matter is submitted to important changes leading to modifications on physico-chemical parameters. Little is known about the fate of chromium during composting process, while some changes in its speciation and leachability may be expected. This question is especially relevant In New-Caledonia, a French Archipelago, where the geochemical background highlights naturally high level of trace metal. Total chromium in soils can reach 30,000 mg kg-1 and MWSC can contain up to 1,200 mg kg-1, exceeding ten times the authorized contents in compost by the French regulation. In this work, we studied windrows MWSC composting at the initial (t=0) and final phases (t=6months) of composting. The total chromium content (Qtot) was measured, and the leachability of chromium in compost was assessed with kinetic extractions using EDTA 0.05 M over 24h. Extraction curves were modeled as the sum of two first-order reactions to distinguish two mobile fractions from the total pool: one “labile” fraction (Q1), quickly extractable, with a rate constant k1, and one “moderately labile” (Q2), less extractable with a rate constant k2. The remaining fraction is the EDTA non-extractable pool. MWSC contained 327±5.9 mg kgdry mass(DM)-1 and 426±8.1 mg kgDM 1 of chromium at t=0 and t=6months, respectively. For both maturity stages, the total mobilizable pool (Q1+Q2) represented less than 3% of Qtot. After 6 months of composting process, Qtot increased by 1.3-fold due to loss of water and of volatile compounds. Nevertheless, the mobilizable pools varied differently. The Q1 pool strongly increased with the composting process, being multiplied by 2.55 whereas the Q2 pool decreased, i.e. it was divided by 1.33. These results indicated that the composting process increases the most labile fraction of chromium. The total mobilizable fraction of chromium represents a relative low fraction of Qtot. However, long term risks related to repeated compost application in agriculture must be considered as chromium could be potentially transferred to groundwater or cultivated plants, affecting agriculture production and human health
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dig-cirad-fr-5990042021-09-09T13:05:10Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/599004/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/599004/ Temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in New-Caledonia. Klein Perrine, Leopold Audrey, Gunkel-Grillon Peggy, Kaplan Hélène, Juillot Farid, Feder Frédéric. 2021. . European Association of Geochemistry, Geochemical Society. s.l. : European Association of Geochemistry, Résumé, 1 p. Goldschmidt 2021, s.l., 4 Juillet 2021/9 Juillet 2021.https://2021.goldschmidt.info/goldschmidt/2021/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/6666 <https://2021.goldschmidt.info/goldschmidt/2021/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/6666> Researchers Temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in New-Caledonia Klein, Perrine Leopold, Audrey Gunkel-Grillon, Peggy Kaplan, Hélène Juillot, Farid Feder, Frédéric eng 2021 European Association of Geochemistry Compost produced from municipal wastewater sludges and green wastes (MWSC) is a promising way for recycling wastewater sludges and for improving agricultural production. During the composting, organic matter is submitted to important changes leading to modifications on physico-chemical parameters. Little is known about the fate of chromium during composting process, while some changes in its speciation and leachability may be expected. This question is especially relevant In New-Caledonia, a French Archipelago, where the geochemical background highlights naturally high level of trace metal. Total chromium in soils can reach 30,000 mg kg-1 and MWSC can contain up to 1,200 mg kg-1, exceeding ten times the authorized contents in compost by the French regulation. In this work, we studied windrows MWSC composting at the initial (t=0) and final phases (t=6months) of composting. The total chromium content (Qtot) was measured, and the leachability of chromium in compost was assessed with kinetic extractions using EDTA 0.05 M over 24h. Extraction curves were modeled as the sum of two first-order reactions to distinguish two mobile fractions from the total pool: one “labile” fraction (Q1), quickly extractable, with a rate constant k1, and one “moderately labile” (Q2), less extractable with a rate constant k2. The remaining fraction is the EDTA non-extractable pool. MWSC contained 327±5.9 mg kgdry mass(DM)-1 and 426±8.1 mg kgDM 1 of chromium at t=0 and t=6months, respectively. For both maturity stages, the total mobilizable pool (Q1+Q2) represented less than 3% of Qtot. After 6 months of composting process, Qtot increased by 1.3-fold due to loss of water and of volatile compounds. Nevertheless, the mobilizable pools varied differently. The Q1 pool strongly increased with the composting process, being multiplied by 2.55 whereas the Q2 pool decreased, i.e. it was divided by 1.33. These results indicated that the composting process increases the most labile fraction of chromium. The total mobilizable fraction of chromium represents a relative low fraction of Qtot. However, long term risks related to repeated compost application in agriculture must be considered as chromium could be potentially transferred to groundwater or cultivated plants, affecting agriculture production and human health conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/599004/3/ID599004.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html https://2021.goldschmidt.info/goldschmidt/2021/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/6666 info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/purl/https://2021.goldschmidt.info/goldschmidt/2021/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/6666 |
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Compost produced from municipal wastewater sludges and green wastes (MWSC) is a promising way for recycling wastewater sludges and for improving agricultural production. During the composting, organic matter is submitted to important changes leading to modifications on physico-chemical parameters. Little is known about the fate of chromium during composting process, while some changes in its speciation and leachability may be expected. This question is especially relevant In New-Caledonia, a French Archipelago, where the geochemical background highlights naturally high level of trace metal. Total chromium in soils can reach 30,000 mg kg-1 and MWSC can contain up to 1,200 mg kg-1, exceeding ten times the authorized contents in compost by the French regulation. In this work, we studied windrows MWSC composting at the initial (t=0) and final phases (t=6months) of composting. The total chromium content (Qtot) was measured, and the leachability of chromium in compost was assessed with kinetic extractions using EDTA 0.05 M over 24h. Extraction curves were modeled as the sum of two first-order reactions to distinguish two mobile fractions from the total pool: one “labile” fraction (Q1), quickly extractable, with a rate constant k1, and one “moderately labile” (Q2), less extractable with a rate constant k2. The remaining fraction is the EDTA non-extractable pool. MWSC contained 327±5.9 mg kgdry mass(DM)-1 and 426±8.1 mg kgDM 1 of chromium at t=0 and t=6months, respectively. For both maturity stages, the total mobilizable pool (Q1+Q2) represented less than 3% of Qtot. After 6 months of composting process, Qtot increased by 1.3-fold due to loss of water and of volatile compounds. Nevertheless, the mobilizable pools varied differently. The Q1 pool strongly increased with the composting process, being multiplied by 2.55 whereas the Q2 pool decreased, i.e. it was divided by 1.33. These results indicated that the composting process increases the most labile fraction of chromium. The total mobilizable fraction of chromium represents a relative low fraction of Qtot. However, long term risks related to repeated compost application in agriculture must be considered as chromium could be potentially transferred to groundwater or cultivated plants, affecting agriculture production and human health |
format |
conference_item |
author |
Klein, Perrine Leopold, Audrey Gunkel-Grillon, Peggy Kaplan, Hélène Juillot, Farid Feder, Frédéric |
spellingShingle |
Klein, Perrine Leopold, Audrey Gunkel-Grillon, Peggy Kaplan, Hélène Juillot, Farid Feder, Frédéric Temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in New-Caledonia |
author_facet |
Klein, Perrine Leopold, Audrey Gunkel-Grillon, Peggy Kaplan, Hélène Juillot, Farid Feder, Frédéric |
author_sort |
Klein, Perrine |
title |
Temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in New-Caledonia |
title_short |
Temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in New-Caledonia |
title_full |
Temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in New-Caledonia |
title_fullStr |
Temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in New-Caledonia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in New-Caledonia |
title_sort |
temporal evolution of chromium leachability in compost, a case study in new-caledonia |
publisher |
European Association of Geochemistry |
url |
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/599004/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/599004/3/ID599004.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
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