Abstract

In this study, we focused on soil contaminated by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) at typical coking-polluted sites in Beijing, conducted research on enhanced PAH bioremediation and methods to evaluate remediation effects based on toxicity testing, and examined changes in pollutant concentrations during ozone preoxidation coupled with biodegradation in test soil samples. The toxicity of mixed PAHs in soil was directly evaluated using the Ames test, and the correlation between mixed PAH mutagenicity and benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) toxicity was investigated in an effort to establish a carcinogenic risk assessment model based on biological toxicity tests to evaluate remediation effects on PAH-contaminated soil. This study provides a theoretical and methodological foundation for evaluating the effect of bioremediation on PAH-contaminated soil at industrially contaminated sites. The results revealed that the removal rate of PAHs after 5min of O3 preoxidation and 4weeks of soil reaction with saponin surfactants and medium was 83.22%. The soil PAH extract obtained after remediation had a positive effect on the TA98 strain at a dose of 2000μg·dish-1, and the carcinogenic risk based on the Ames toxicity test was 8.98 times greater than that calculated by conventional carcinogenic PAH toxicity parameters. The total carcinogenic risk of the remediated soil samples was approximately one order of magnitude less than that of the original soil samples.

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