Abstract
Spent portable batteries belong to the category of hazardous waste, sometimes dumped together with non-hazardous municipal waste in landfills, resulting in various aquatic environments. Their presence in the aquatic environment leads to changes in its quality and its contamination with heavy metals or other toxic elements. This paper highlights the portable battery waste’s influence on the aquatic environment in stagnant conditions. Therefore, three types of batteries and three solutions with different pH values were used to represent the possible media existing in nature: acid (pH = 4.00), rainwater (pH = 5.63), and alkaline (pH = 8.00). After 180 days, the results showed changes in the chromatics and composition of the initial solutions. The analyses showed decreased pH, increased conductivity, and the transfer of several heavy metals into solutions (Cu, Pb, Zn, Ni, and Fe). Thus, there were slight exceedances of the maximum allowed values for water quality class I (Order no. 161/2006) in the case of Cu and Pb and higher exceedances in the case of Zn, Ni, and Fe. Zinc–carbon batteries stand out because of the release of Pb and Fe ions. The same applies to lithium manganese dioxide batteries because of Ni ions as well as zinc–manganese alloy batteries because of Cu and Zn ions. Altogether, the negative influence of spent batteries on the aquatic environment is noticed, and the measures for the implementation of safe disposal and processing are necessary.
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