Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4482151 Water Research 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Granular activated carbon (GAC) can remove trace organic pollutants and natural organic matter (NOM) from industrial and municipal waters. This paper evaluates an iron nanocatalyst approach, based on Fenton-like oxidation reactions, to regenerate spent GAC within a packed bed configuration after saturation by organic compounds. Specifically, we focus on regenerating GAC packed beds equilibrated with varying influent concentrations of phenol, a model organic compound. Iron nanocatalysts were synthesized using ferric chloride, a chemical already used as a coagulant at municipal WTPs, and reacted with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) for the purpose of in-situ regeneration. Up to 95% of phenol adsorption capacity was regenerated for GAC equilibrated with 1000 mg/L of phenol. Using this technique, at least four adsorption–regeneration cycles can be performed sequentially for the same batch of GAC with fresh iron nanocatalysts while achieving a regeneration efficiency of 90 ± 5% between each loading. Moreover, the iron nanocatalyst can be recovered and reused multiple times. Lower initial adsorbate concentrations (10–500 mg/L) resulted in a slightly lower saturated adsorbent-phase concentration of phenol and lower regeneration efficiencies (72 ± 5%). Additionally, this catalytic in-situ regeneration was applied to GAC saturated by NOM. A slightly lower regeneration efficiency (60%) was observed for the Suwannee River NOM adsorption capacity of GAC. The next step is validation in a pilot-scale test that applies this regeneration technique to a GAC adsorber employed in NOM removal.

► We perform in-situ regeneration of phenol-saturated GAC using iron nanocatalyst/H2O2. ► 90% Regeneration efficiency is achieved when GAC is saturated by 1000 mg-phenol/L. ► Five adsorption–regeneration cycles can be conducted on the same batch of GAC. ► Regeneration efficiency decreases if the initial adsorbate concentration is lower. ► The used iron nanocatalyst can be recycled without significant loss of reactivity.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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