AI Article Synopsis

  • In situ chemical oxidations effectively address PAH contaminations in groundwater and soils, with this study focusing on comparing three oxidation processes: permanganate, heat-activated persulfate, and Fenton-like reactions using magnetite against ferrates.
  • The research specifically highlights the limited effectiveness of Fenton-like processes for degradation, while heat-activated persulfate showed the best results without producing harmful oxygenated PAH by-products, and permanganate also performed well but generated significant amounts of ketones.
  • Ferrates, although efficient on various pollutants and yielding nontoxic by-products, exhibited lower degradation efficiency in soil applications and produced harmful oxygenated by-products, indicating a different reaction mechanism compared to the other tested oxidants.

Article Abstract

In situ chemical oxidations are known to remediate PAH contaminations in groundwater and soils. In this study, batch-scale oxidations aim to compare the PAC (polycyclic aromatic compound) degradation of three oxidation processes traditionally applied for soil treatment: permanganate, heat-activated persulfate (60 °C) and Fenton-like activated by magnetite, to results obtained with ferrates (Fe). Widely studied for water treatments, ferrates are efficient on a wide range of pollutants with the advantage of producing nontoxic ferric sludge after reaction. However, fewer works focus on their action on soil, especially on semi-industrial grade ferrates (compatible with field application). Oxidations were carried out on sand spiked with dense non-aqueous phase liquid (DNAPL) sampled in the groundwater of a former coking plant. Conventional 16 US-EPA PAHs and polar PACs were monitored, especially potential oxygenated by-products that can be more harmful than parent-PAHs. After seven reaction days, only the Fenton-like showed limited degradation. Highest efficiencies were obtained for heat-activated persulfate with no O-PAC ketones formed. Permanganate gave important degradation, but ketones were generated in large amount. The tested ferrates not only gave slightly lower yields due to their auto-decomposition but also induced O-PAC ketone production, suggesting a reactional pathway dominated by oxidoreductive electron transfer, rather than a radical one.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-019-06841-0DOI Listing

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