Soil vanadium pollution and microbial response characteristics from stone coal smelting district
(Institute of Environmental Engineering, School of Metallurgy and Environment,
Central South University, Changsha 410083, China)
Central South University, Changsha 410083, China)
Abstract: A field investigation was performed to study the content, speciation and mobility of vanadium, as well as microbial response in soil from a stone coal smelting district in Hunan province of China. The results showed that the contents of soil V ranged from 168 to 1538 mg/kg, which exceeded the maximum permissible value of Canadian soil quality for V. The mean soil V content from wasteland area reached 1421 mg/kg, and those from the areas related with slag heap, ore pile and smelting center were 380, 260 and 225 mg/kg, respectively. Based on the results of the modified BCR sequential extraction procedure, V contents in the mobile fractions varied from 19.2 to 637 mg/kg accounting for 7.4%-42.3% of total V, and those of V(+5) species were between 21.9 and 534.0 mg/kg. Soil enzyme activity and microbial basal respiration were adversely affected by high level of soil V. More attention should be paid to soil V pollution and potential hazardous surrounding the stone coal smelting district.
Key words: vanadium; soil pollution; mobility; microbial response; stone coal smelting district