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Kinetics and oxidative mechanism for H2O2-enhanced iron-mediated aeration (IMA) treatment of recalcitrant organic compounds in mature landfill leachate. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A hydrogen peroxide-enhanced iron-mediated aeration (IMA) process effectively removes organic waste from mature landfill leachate, with the study focusing on the kinetics and oxidative mechanisms involved.
  • Bench-scale tests identified key process variables, including pH, initial hydrogen peroxide doses, and iron surface area, which influenced the removal rates of chemical oxygen demand (COD) and hydrogen peroxide decay.
  • The results suggest that high aeration rates reduce hydrogen peroxide self-decomposition, enhance COD removal, and show that hydroxyl radicals are not the main oxidants in slightly basic conditions, highlighting this IMA technology's potential for treating difficult organic wastewater.

Article Abstract

A hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2))-enhanced iron (Fe(0))-mediated aeration (IMA) process has been recently demonstrated to effectively remove organic wastes from mature landfill leachate. In this paper, the kinetics and oxidative mechanisms of the enhanced IMA treatment were studied. Bench-scale full factorial tests were conducted in an orbital shaker reactor for treatment of a mature leachate with an initial chemical oxygen demand (COD) of 900-1200 mg/L. At the maximum aeration rate (8.3 mL air/min mL sample), process variables significantly influencing the rates of H(2)O(2) decay and COD removal were pH (3.0-8.0), initial H(2)O(2) doses (0.21-0.84 M), and Fe(0) surface area concentrations (0.06-0.30 m(2)/L). Empirical kinetic models were developed and verified for the degradation of H(2)O(2) and COD. High DO maintained by a high aeration rate slowed the H(2)O(2) self-decomposition, accelerated Fe(0) consumption, and enhanced the COD removal. In hydroxyl radical (OH*) scavenging tests, the rate of removal of glyoxylic acid (target compound) was not inhibited by the addition of para-chlorobenzoic acid (OH* scavenger) at pH 7.0-7.5, ruling out hydroxyl radical as the principal oxidant in neutral-weakly basic solution. These experimental results show that this enhanced IMA technology is a potential alternative for the treatment of high strength recalcitrant organic wastewaters.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2009.03.106DOI Listing

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