Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6330552 | Science of The Total Environment | 2014 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
A new approach concerning in-situ remediation on source ('hot-spot') decontamination of a chromate damage in connection with an innovative pump-and-treat-technique has been developed. Iron granulates show significant higher reduction rates, using fluidized bed conditions, than a literature study with a fixed bed installation of small-sized iron granules. First results from an abandoned tannery site concerning injections of sodium dithionite as a chromate reductant for the vadose zone in combination with a pump-and-treat-method, allying the advantages of granulated zero valent iron (ZVI), are reported. Reduction amounts of chromate have been found up to 88% compared with initial values in the soil after a soil water exchange of 8 pore volumes within 2.5Â months. Chromate concentrations in the pumped effluent have been reduced to under the detection limit of 0.005Â mg/L by treatment with ZVI in the pilot plant.
Keywords
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Environmental Chemistry
Authors
P. Müller, K.E. Lorber, R. Mischitz, C. WeiÃ,