Advanced Oxidation Based Treatment of Soil Wash Water Contaminated with Sulfolane
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Chemicals
2.2. Experimental Procedure
2.2.1. Soil Washing Standalone
2.2.2. Advanced Oxidation Process Treatment of Soil Washing Water
- For UV/H2O2 experiments, a Luzchem photoreactor equipped with 10 germicidal lamps (8 Watt LZC-UVC, Luzchem), was used. The photoreactor has a 30 cm wide, 30 cm deep, and 22 cm high chamber as shown in Figure S1. The chamber is made of aluminum alloy (Al 5052-H32), which can serve as good reflector. There are five lamps on each side of the chamber. The number of photons received by 100 mL solution in the quartz beaker per unit time was measured to be 5.3 × 1017 photon/s through ferrioxalate actinometry [19]. Four different H2O2 dosages were applied to each diluted sample.
- For UV/O3 experiments, ozone was generated through an O3 generator (A2Z 5-G LAB, A2Z O3 systems Inc.), which was introduced into the solution through a glass diffuser. Samples for each dilution were treated with four different ozone flow rates (1.9, 2.9, 3.7, and 4.3 g/h). The ozone flow rates were calculated based on ozone concentration in ozone generator outlet and the gas volumetric flow rate.
- For alkaline ozonation, sodium hydroxide was gradually added into the solution to adjust the pH from 10 to 13 before exposure to ozone. Ozone flow rate was kept at 3.7 g/h.
- For neutral Fenton experiments, FeEDTA and H2O2 were introduced into the solution at a molar ratio of 1:10. The FeEDTA concentrations were 0.4 mM (147 mg/L), 2 mM (734 mg/L), and 10 mM (3670 mg/L). A total of 100 mg of sodium thiosulfate was used to quench the reaction.
2.2.3. Extraction and GC Analysis
3. Results and Discussions
3.1. Soil Washing
3.2. AOP as a Post Soil Washing Treatment
3.2.1. UV/H2O2
3.2.2. UV/O3
3.2.3. Alkaline Ozonation
3.2.4. Neutral Fenton
4. Conclusions
- UVC irradiation combined with appropriate H2O2 concentration can remove more than 99% of sulfolane within 1 h. The suitable H2O2 concentration was determined to be 200 mg/L in undiluted sample, leading to a k value of 0.06 min−1.UVC assisted ozonation can effectively degrade sulfolane within 30 min. The suitable ozone flow rate was determined to be 3.7 g/h.
- Ozonation with higher pH can increased the sulfolane degradation in soil wash water.
- Neutral Fenton reagents perform poorly in sulfolane removal. Less than 50% of sulfolane removal were observed within 1 h.
- Dilution can increase sulfolane degradation kinetics for all AOP treatments. Neutral Fenton is least sensitive to dilution effect, whereas alkaline ozonation is highly sensitive to dilution.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Experiment No. | Soil/Water Ratio | Extraction Time per Cycle | No of Cycle |
---|---|---|---|
SW1 | 1:2 | 30 min | 1 |
SW2 | 1:2 | 60 min | 1 |
SW3 | 1:2 | 90 min | 1 |
SW4 | 1:1 | 30 min | 1 |
SW5 | 1:2 | 30 min | 1 |
SW6 | 1:3 | 30 min | 1 |
SW7 | 1:2 | 30 min | 3 |
Type of AOP | Dilution Factor | [Sulfolane] (mg/L) | Photon Flux * (photon/s) | [H2O2] (mg/L) | O3 (g/h) | [FeEDTA] (mg/L) | pH |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
UVC/H2O2 | 1 | 100 | 5.3 × 1017 | 100 | - | - | 7 |
200 | |||||||
500 | |||||||
1000 | |||||||
5 | 20 | 5.3 × 1017 | 20 | - | - | 7 | |
40 | |||||||
100 | |||||||
200 | |||||||
500 | 0.2 | 5.3 × 1017 | 5 | - | - | 7 | |
20 | |||||||
40 | |||||||
100 | |||||||
UVC/O3 | 1 | 100 | 5.3 × 1017 | - | 1.9 | - | 7 |
2.9 | |||||||
3.7 | |||||||
4.3 | |||||||
5 | 20 | 5.3 × 1017 | - | 1.9 | - | 7 | |
2.9 | |||||||
3.7 | |||||||
4.3 | |||||||
500 | 0.2 | 5.3 × 1017 | - | 1.9 | - | 7 | |
2.9 | |||||||
3.7 | |||||||
4.3 | |||||||
Alkaline O3 | 1 | 100 | - | - | 3.7 | - | 10 |
11 | |||||||
12 | |||||||
13 | |||||||
5 | 20 | - | - | 3.7 | - | 10 | |
11 | |||||||
12 | |||||||
13 | |||||||
Neutral Fenton | 1 | 100 | - | 3400 | - | 3670 | 7 |
680 | 734 | ||||||
136 | 147 | ||||||
5 | 20 | - | 3400 | - | 3670 | 7 | |
680 | 734 | ||||||
136 | 147 | ||||||
500 | 0.2 | - | 3400 | - | 3670 | 7 | |
680 | 734 | ||||||
136 | 147 |
Parameters | GC-FID | GC-MS |
---|---|---|
GC column | ZB 5MSI (Phenomenex) | ZB 5MSI (Phenomenex) |
Carrier gas type | helium | helium |
Carrier gas program | constant pressure at 250 kPa | constant flow rate at 1.07 mL/min |
Injection temperature | 165 °C | 250 °C |
Injection volume | 1.00 µL | 1.00 µL |
Mode of injection | splitless | splitless |
Oven program | 90 °C hold for 2 min; 10 °C/min to 175 °C; 175 °C hold for 3 min. | 90 °C hold for 2 min; 10 °C/min to 160 °C; 20 °C/min to 280 °C; 280 °C hold for 2 min. |
FID temperature | 330 °C | \ |
Mode of MS | \ | SIM |
m/z | \ | 41, 56, and 120 |
[H2O2] mg/L | Photon Energy Required to Remove 90% of Sulfolane from the Wash Water (kWh/m3) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Undiluted | 5× Dilution | 500× Dilution | |
5 | / | / | 286.39 |
20 | / | 186.45 | 171.71 |
40 | / | 103.96 | 210.85 |
100 | 6.52 | 29.26 | 254.99 |
200 | 2.54 | 12.58 | / |
500 | 2.02 | / | / |
1000 | 2.50 | / | / |
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Brandão, M.; Yu, L.; Garcia, C.; Achari, G. Advanced Oxidation Based Treatment of Soil Wash Water Contaminated with Sulfolane. Water 2019, 11, 2152. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11102152
Brandão M, Yu L, Garcia C, Achari G. Advanced Oxidation Based Treatment of Soil Wash Water Contaminated with Sulfolane. Water. 2019; 11(10):2152. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11102152
Chicago/Turabian StyleBrandão, Mariana, Linlong Yu, Carlos Garcia, and Gopal Achari. 2019. "Advanced Oxidation Based Treatment of Soil Wash Water Contaminated with Sulfolane" Water 11, no. 10: 2152. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11102152
APA StyleBrandão, M., Yu, L., Garcia, C., & Achari, G. (2019). Advanced Oxidation Based Treatment of Soil Wash Water Contaminated with Sulfolane. Water, 11(10), 2152. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11102152