The contents and release behavior of heavy metals in construction and demolition waste used in freeway construction
2020
Chen, Yuyun | Zhou, Yiqiang
A large volume (more than 4.0 million m³) of treated construction and demolition waste (CDW) is planned to be used in the construction of the Xi’an-Xianyang north loop line freeway in West China. These CDW were preliminarily separated into broken concretes, bricks, and porcelains in the treatment plants. In this study, a total of 190 CDW samples including 80 concretes, 80 bricks, 20 porcelains, and 10 mixed samples were collected from five treatment plants. Five farmland soil samples near treatment plants were collected as controls. The contents of 10 elements including cadmium (Cd), arsenic (As), copper (Cu), nickel (Ni), zinc (Zn), chromium (Cr), lead (Pb), manganese (Mn), silver (Ag), and mercury (Hg) in these samples were measured. The contents of 8 elements (Cu, Ni, Zn, Cr, Pb, Mn, Ag, and Hg) in all CDW samples were qualified for the third-level criterion of the Standard of Soil Environment (GB15618-2008). However, Cd contents in 37 concretes, 34 bricks, 6 porcelain samples, and 4 mixed CDW samples exceeded the national third-level standards (1 mg/kg) in GB15618-2008. And As contents in 28 concretes, 21 bricks, 5 porcelain samples, and 3 mixed CDW samples were higher than the national third-level standards (40 mg/kg). The total exceeding standard rates (ESRs) of Cd and As were 42.6% and 30%, respectively. The leaching tests for Cd and As were also done due to their higher ESRs. The results showed that the release amounts (μg/kg) of Cd and As from CDW were increased with increasing liquid to solid ratio (0.4–10 l/kg) but decreased with increasing pH (4–7). The leached concentrations of Cd and As from four types of CDW samples were both in a descending order: brick, mixed materials, concrete, and porcelain. The measured concentrations (μg/L) of Cd and As in leachate were all lower than second-grade criteria of Standard for Groundwater Quality (GB3838-2002). By comparing the leached concentrations of Cd and As with the value in European criteria (EU Council Decision 2003/33/EC) for hazardous wastes, all the CDW samples should be classified as inert or non-hazardous wastes. Thus, it could be concluded that heavy metals in these CDW would not pollute surrounding soil, surface water, and groundwater environment when applied in freeway construction.
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