Remediation of organophosphorus pesticide polluted soil using persulfate oxidation activated by microwave.

J Hazard Mater

Key Laboratory of Pollution Processes and Environmental Criteria, Ministry of Education, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Environmental Remediation and Pollution Control, College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, PR China.

Published: January 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Contaminated sites from the pesticide industry are a major global concern due to high organic pollution and habitat loss.
  • This study investigated the effectiveness of microwave-activated persulfate (MW/PS) oxidation for degrading parathion, showing a roughly 90% degradation rate within 90 minutes, outperforming other treatment methods.
  • Factors like higher microwave temperature, larger persulfate dosage, and lower organic matter content improved degradation, while the process generated various reactive species that facilitated the breakdown of parathion and other organophosphorus pesticides.

Article Abstract

Contaminated sites from pesticide industry have attracted global concern due to the characteristics of organic pollution with high concentrations and complete loss of habitat conditions. Remediation of organophosphorus pesticide polluted soil using microwave-activated persulfate (MW/PS) oxidation was investigated in this study, with parathion as the representative pesticide. Approximately 90 % of parathion was degraded after 90 min of MW/PS oxidation treatment, which was superior to those by single PS or MW treatment. Relatively greater performances for parathion degradation were obtained in a relatively larger PS dosage, higher microwave temperature, and lower organic matter content. Appropriate soil moisture favored parathion degradation in soil. SO, OH, O, and O generated in the MW/PS system all contributed to parathion degradation. Multiple spectroscopy analyses indicated that PO and PS bonds in parathion were destroyed after MW/PS oxidation, accompanied by generation of hydroxylated and carbonylated byproducts. The soil safety after parathion degradation was assessed via model prediction. Furthermore, MW/PS oxidation also exhibited great performance for degradation of other organophosphorus pesticides, including ethion, phorate, and terbufos.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.123361DOI Listing

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