Estimating Heavy Metal Concentrations in Technosols with Reflectance Spectroscopy

Abstract

Reflectance spectroscopy in the visible-infrared and shortwave infrared (450– 2500 nm) wavelength region is a rapid, cost-effective and non-destructive method that can be used to monitor heavy metal (PTE, potential toxic elements) contaminated areas. Due to the PTE pollution that has accumulated in the course of wastewater treatment, the existence of Technosols presents an environmental problem, a potential source for PTE uptake by vegetation, or even the release of PTEs into groundwater. In this study, multivariate procedures using Partial Least Squares Regression (PLSR) and Random Forest Regression (RFR) are applied to quantify relationships between soil heavy metal concentration (Cr, Cu, Ni, Zn) and reflectance data of highly contaminated Technosols from a former sewage farm near Berlin, Germany. Laboratory measurements of 110 soil samples in four different preparation steps were acquired with HySpex hyperspectral cameras. The impact of the different preparation steps, namely oven-dried'', sieved’’, ground'', LOI’’, was evaluated for its potential to enhance the method performance or to reduce the time-consuming soil sample preparation. Furthermore, different spectral pre-processing methods were evaluated regarding improvements of spectral modelling performance and their ability to minimise noise and multiple scattering effects. Considering the optimal coefficient of determination (R2), PLSR shows an improving performance and accuracy with increasing preparation steps such as ground or LOI for all metals of interest (R2textsubscriptCr: 0.52– 0.78; R2textsubscriptCu: 0.36– 0.73; R2textsubscriptNi: 0.19– 0.42 and R2textsubscriptZn: 0.41– 0.74). RFR shows a weaker estimation performance for all metals, even when using higher sample preparation levels (R2textsubscriptCr: 0.36– 0.62; R2textsubscriptCu: 0.17– 0.72; R2textsubscriptNi: 0.20– 0.35 and R2textsubscriptZn: 0.26– 0.67). The results show that an application of methods such as PLSR for the prediction of PTE concentration in Technosols is still a challenge but provides more robust estimations than the user-friendly RFR method. Additionally, this study shows that PTE estimation performance in heterogeneous soil samples can be improved by increased laboratory soil preparation steps and further spectral pre-processing steps.

Publication
Geoderma

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