An innovative method is proposed for approximation of the set of radial diffusion equations governing mass exchange between aqueous bulk phase and intra-particle phase for a hetero-disperse mixture of particles such as those occurring in suspension in surface water, in riverine/estuarine sediment beds, in soils and in aquifer materials. For this purpose the temporal variation of concentration at several uniformly distributed points within a normalized representative particle with spherical, cylindrical or planar shape is fitted with a 2-domain linear reversible mass exchange model. The approximation method is then superposed in order to generalize the model to a hetero-disperse mixture of particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe influence of natural organic matter (NOM) rigidity on the sorption, desorption, and competitive displacement rates of 1,2-Dichlorobenzene (1,2-DCB) was evaluated using batch reactor experiments with two surface soils (Yolo and Forbes) and a shale (Ohio). Previous characterization suggests that the shale NOM is the most reduced and condensed, the Yolo soil is the most oxidized and amorphous, and Forbes soil has an intermediate NOM structure. The rate study for each sorbent was conducted under the same reactor parameters, and 1,2-DCB mass-transfer rates were determined using the distributed first-order mass-transfer rate model based on the gamma probability density function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study focused on evaluating the influence of the rigidity of natural organic matter (NOM) associated with four natural geosorbents in controlling the non-ideal sorption behaviors of five chlorinated benzenes. Single solute sorption isotherms for each sorbate/sorbent combination were modeled and interpreted by the Freundlich sorption isotherm and the adsorption-partitioning model based on Polanyi-Manes theory (PM model). "Rigid" organic matter was operationally quantified as the fraction of carbon resistant to wet chemical oxidation (hard carbon) or thermal oxidation (soot carbon); atomic H/O ratios indicated a close correlation between the degree of reduction of the NOM and its rigidity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe competitive sorption behaviors of 1,2-DCB in binary solute systems in four natural sorbents having natural organic matter (NOM) matrixes of different physicochemical characters were investigated in batch reactors. Specifically, the study focused on investigating how the extent of 1,2-DCB competitive sorption depends on (i) the rigidity of NOM matrixes as assessed by the efficiency of chemical oxidation and (ii) the closeness of competitor structure to that of the primary solute. The chemical oxidation and elemental composition results suggest that the shale NOM is the most reduced and condensed, the peat was the most oxidized and amorphous, and two surface soils had intermediate NOM structures.
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