Abstract

Soil and water contamination by potentially toxic metals (PTMs) has exerted adverse environmental impacts, which justifies studies of promising remediation alternatives. This article investigated the competitive sorption of cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), and zinc (Zn) onto peat, compost, and biochar derived from the organic fraction of municipal solid waste (OFMSW), but its main innovation was the post-sorption assessment. The effects of contact time on competition between contaminants were systematically analyzed by batch experiments and the effectiveness of the sorption process was evaluated in desorption tests (H2O, HCl, NaOH, and NaCl) and sequential extraction. Kinetic data were well-fitted to pseudo-first-order (PFO) and pseudo-second-order (PSO) models and the intra-particle diffusion model revealed the existence of multiple linear regions, indicating the sorption process was controlled by a multi-step mechanism. The sorption capacities followed a biochar > compost > peat order, with biochar retaining more than 99% of Cd, Pb, and Zn in all samples. The general order of desorption percentage was peat > compost > biochar, with a below 0.60% biochar release, suggesting the importance of chemical processes. HCl solution (more acid pH) showed the highest release of previously sorbed contaminants and, therefore, can be employed for the reuse of sorbents (sorption/desorption cycles). The only exception was Pb desorption on biochar, with maximum release in NaOH solution. A negative Pearson correlation with F1 (acid-soluble/exchangeable fraction) for Cd and Zn and a positive one with the other steps were reported. Pb exhibited an opposite behavior, showing the highest sorption performances and the lowest desorption rates for all sorbents, justified by positive correlations with F4 (residual fraction) and negative ones with desorption. The findings suggest the evaluated sorbents, especially compost and biochar, can be effective materials in the simultaneous sorption of Cd, Pb, and Zn in wastewater, as well as an amendment for PTMs immobilization in contaminated soils.

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