Title of article :
Persulfate oxidation for in situ remediation of TCE.
II. Activated by chelated ferrous ion
Author/Authors :
Chenju Liang، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , Clifford J. Bruell، نويسنده , , Michael C. Marley، نويسنده , ,
Kenneth L. Sperry b، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
In situ chemical oxidation (ISCO) is a technique used to remediate contaminated soil and groundwater systems. It
has been postulated that sodium persulfate (Na2S2O8) can be activated by transition metal ions such as ferrous ion
(Fe2þ) to produce a powerful oxidant known as the sulfate free radical (SO
4 ) with a redox potential of 2.6 V, which can
potentially destroy organic contaminants. In this laboratory study persulfate oxidation of dissolved trichloroethylene
(TCE) was investigated in aqueous and soil slurry systems under a variety of experimental conditions. A chelating agent
(i.e., citric acid) was used in attempt to manipulate the quantity of ferrous ion in solution by providing an appropriate
chelate/Fe2þ molar ratio. In an aqueous system a chelate/Fe2þ molar ratio of 1/5 (e.g., S2O2
8 /chelate/Fe2þ/TCE ratio of
20/2/10/1) was found to be the lowest acceptable ratio to maintain sufficient quantities of Fe2þ activator in solution
resulting in nearly complete TCE destruction after only 20 min. The availability of Fe2þ appeared to be controlled by
adjusting the molar ratio of chelate/Fe2þ. In general, high levels of chelated ferrous ion concentrations resulted in faster
TCE degradation and more persulfate decomposition. However, if initial ferrous ion contents are relatively low, sufficient
quantities of chelate must be provided to ensure the chelation of a greater percentage of the limited ferrous ion
present. Citric acid chelated ferrous ion appeared effective for TCE degradation within soil slurries but required longer
reaction times. Additionally, the use of citric acid without the addition of supplemental Fe2þ in soil slurries, where the
citric acid apparently extracted native metals from the soil, appeared to be somewhat effective at enhancing persulfate
oxidation of TCE over extended reaction times. A comparison of different chelating agents revealed that citric acid was
the most effective.
Keywords :
Citric acid , In situ chemical oxidation (ISCO) , activation , free radical
Journal title :
Chemosphere
Journal title :
Chemosphere