کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5746513 | 1618796 | 2017 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Fe0-activated persulfate was used to treat 1,4-dioxane.
- Excess Fe2+ from Fe0 can hinder dioxane degradation.
- Adding Fe0 in increments improves dioxane degradation.
- Slow-release persulfate and Fe0 formulations effectively treated dioxane.
- 14C-labeled dioxane was used to track mineralization.
1,4-dioxane is an emerging contaminant that was used as a corrosion inhibitor with chlorinated solvents. Metal-activated persulfate can degrade dioxane but reaction kinetics have typically been characterized by a rapid decrease during the first 30Â min followed by either a slower decrease or no further change (i.e., plateau). Our objective was to identify the factors responsible for this plateau and then determine if slow-release formulations of sodium persulfate and Fe0 could provide a more sustainable degradation treatment. We accomplished this by conducting batch experiments where Fe0-activated persulfate was used to treat dioxane. Treatment variables included the timing at which the dioxane was added to the Fe0-persulfate reaction (TÂ =Â 0 and 30Â min) and including various products of the Fe0-persulfate reaction at TÂ =Â 0Â min (Fe2+, Fe3+, and SO42â). Results showed that when dioxane was spiked into the reaction at 30Â min, no degradation occurred; this is in stark contrast to the 60% decrease observed when added at TÂ =Â 0Â min. Adding Fe2+ at the onset (TÂ =Â 0Â min) also severely halted the reaction and caused a plateau. This indicates that excess ferrous iron produced from the Fe0-persulfate reaction scavenges sulfate radicals and prevents further dioxane degradation. By limiting the release of Fe0 in a slow-release wax formulation, degradation plateaus were avoided and 100% removal of dioxane observed. By using 14C-labeled dioxane, we show that â¼40% of the dioxane carbon is mineralized within 6Â d. These data support the use of slow-release persulfate and zerovalent iron to treat dioxane-contaminated water.
Journal: Chemosphere - Volume 175, May 2017, Pages 170-177