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Thallium isotopes in metallurgical wastes/contaminated soils: A novel tool to trace metal source and behavior

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2018

Abstract

Thallium (Tl) concentration and isotope data have been recorded for contaminated soils and a set of industrial wastes that were produced within different stages of Zn ore mining and metallurgical processing of Zn-rich materials. Despite large differences in Tl levels of the waste materials (1-500 mg kg(-1)), generally small changes in epsilon Tl-205 values have been observed.

However, isotopically lighter Tl was recorded in fly ash (epsilon Tl-205 similar to -4.1) than in slag (epsilon Tl-205 similar to -3.3), implying partial isotope fractionation during material processing. Thallium isotope compositions in the studied soils reflected the Tl contamination (epsilon Tl-205 similar to -3.8), despite the fact that the major pollution period ended more than 30 years ago.

Therefore, we assume that former industrial Tl inputs into soils, if significant, can potentially be traced using the isotope tracing method. We also suggest that the isotope redistributions occurred in some soil (subsurface) horizons, with Tl being isotopically heavier than the pollution source, due to specific sorption and/or precipitation processes, which complicates the discrimination of primary Tl.

Thallium isotope analysis proved to be a promising tool to aid our understanding of Tl behavior within the smelting process, as well as its post-depositional dynamics in the environmental systems (soils).