Issue 61, 2019

Comparison of two sequential extraction procedures for tungsten fractionation in the tungsten mining soils

Abstract

Two sequential extraction procedures including Tessier and Wenzel schemes have been evaluated for the study of tungsten fractionation in soil samples adjacent to the World's largest and longest-operating tungsten mines in China. The efficiency and suitability of two methods and the corresponding extraction steps for partitioning tungsten were compared. Results showed the Tessier scheme classical for cation metals was inappropriate for tungsten fractionation. Although the percentage of readily bioavailable tungsten fractions extracted by the Tessier method is comparable to the Wenzel method, the Tessier scheme still has some drawbacks for partitioning tungsten mainly arising from the lack of selectivity of some of the reagents used. The Wenzel scheme has higher extraction recovery and efficiency than the Tessier method, especially for extracting amorphous and crystalline oxyhydroxides which were mainly responsible for tungsten retention. As a final conclusion, the study indicated that the Wenzel scheme should be more suitable for tungsten fractionation, but we need to make further improvement on the Wenzel scheme by supplementing the extraction stage for the oxidisable fraction to find a reliable and easy to use method to characterize tungsten forms in all soil samples to provide valuable information for risk assessment.

Graphical abstract: Comparison of two sequential extraction procedures for tungsten fractionation in the tungsten mining soils

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Sep 2019
Accepted
28 Oct 2019
First published
01 Nov 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2019,9, 35456-35462

Comparison of two sequential extraction procedures for tungsten fractionation in the tungsten mining soils

R. Li, W. Wang, S. Wang, C. Lin, X. Wang, L. Meng and X. Yuan, RSC Adv., 2019, 9, 35456 DOI: 10.1039/C9RA07158J

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