Chlorendic acid (CA) is a recalcitrant groundwater contaminant for which an effective treatment technology does not currently exist. In this study, a series of batch experiments were conducted to investigate the treatment of CA by zero-valent iron (ZVI) under various water chemistry conditions. It was observed that CA was removed by ZVI via both adsorption and degradation, with the degradation rate being proportional to the fraction of CA adsorbed onto ZVI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCritical micelle concentration (cmc) values were determined for the mixed zwitterionic/cationic gemini systems of N-dodecyl- N, N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate (ZW3-12)/ N, N'-bis(dimethyldodecyl)-α,ω-alkanediammonium dibromide (12-s-12) systems. The cmc values for the mixed systems were determined through conductivity measurements. The degree of nonideality of the interaction in the mixed micelle (β), for each system, was determined according to Rubingh's nonideal solution theory.
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