21.3 Soil Remediation
337
surface, and groundwater, but they also accumulate in living organisms thereby
disrupting the food chain. Disposal of coating materials to prevent rust, dry cell bat-
teries, brass, bronze alloys, and certain other substances also contribute to the soil
pollution thus affecting the quality of soil.
These contaminants hide in saturated and unsaturated layer of the soil which is
underlying between the ground surface and groundwater level. Consequently, these
sites can have a high concentration of organic contaminants in soil layers in addition
to plausible groundwater contamination. They can even depict harmful effect on the
flora and fauna of affected habitats through uptake and accumulation in food chains,
and in some instances, serious health problems or genetic disorders in humans are
also observed.
Soil remediation is generally intended at removal of hydrocarbons (petroleum),
heavy metals, pesticides, cyanides, volatiles, creosotes (carbonaceous products
released during the distillation of several types of tars), and semi-volatiles. Con-
ventional methods that are chiefly being employed in remediation processes are
bioremediation, thermal soil remediation, air sparging, electrokinetic remediation,
phytoremediation, and soil washing [31]. However, these existing methods have
certain bottlenecks/disadvantages such as laborious and time consuming in such
cases, and immediate remediation is quite difficult.
21.3.1
Application of Nanotechnology for Soil Remediation
Application of nanotechnologies for environmental remediation has received
significant attention from the scientific community, specifically its use for reme-
diating heavy metal contaminated soil. Recently, nanoremediation is also being
used for the treatment of hazardous waste sites. It was Gillham, in 1996, who
for the first time investigated and presented the idea of utilizing zero-valent iron
nanoparticles (nZVIs) in the permeable barrier for the effective decontamination
of water-halogenated pollutants. Extensive studies have been carried out and lot of
literature is available pertaining to the application of nanotechnologies to remediate
the contaminated soils [32].
According to the literature, the nanoparticles have the ability to adsorb and facili-
tate degradation of pollutants through various mechanisms, such as redox reactions,
surface processes, adsorption, ion exchange, surface complexation, and electrostatic
interaction. Shi et al. [33] have analyzed nZVIs and zero-valence iron nanoparti-
cles impregnated on a matrix of bentonite (B-nZVI), in the effectual elimination of
chromium(VI) present in water and soil contaminated with heavy metals.
In a particular study, iron nanoparticles impregnated biocarbon depicted
a positive influence on the growth of cabbage and mustard plant grown in
chromium(VI)-contaminated soil compared to untreated plants.
Similarly, SiO2 nanoparticles coated with a lipid derivative of choline have been
extensively used in the bioremediation of PAHs. Other nanomaterials that have been
used are iron sulfide stabilized with carboxymethylcellulose for immobilizing mer-
cury in the polluted soils.