Chromium removal from chromium gypsum through microwave hydrothermal crystal phase regulation.

Environ Sci Pollut Res Int

Chinese National Engineering Research Center for Control & Treatment of Heavy Metal Pollution, School of Metallurgy and Environment, Central South University, Changsha, Hunan, 410083, People's Republic of China.

Published: October 2023

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Article Abstract

Chromium gypsum (CG) is a common hazardous waste formed in chromium salt or electroplating industries. The trapped or lattice-doped CrO in gypsum crystals are difficult to be reduced or removed by traditional methods, which will be re-oxidized or slowly released during long-term hypaethral storage. In this study, microwave hydrothermal treatment was applied to remove chromium in CG. Under optimal conditions (solid-liquid ratio of 1:5, 0.1 M sulfuric acid as liquid media, and 110 °C), over 99% of the chromium in CG can be removed within 10 min. XRD spectra indicated that 59.8% gypsum was transformed to from dihydrate gypsum to hemihydrate gypsum. The toxicity leaching test shows that chromium in CG is 377.0 mg/L before detoxification and 0.55 mg/L after detoxification, which proves that chromium in CG lattice can be efficiently removed. This work enables to significantly advance the dehydration phase transformation process of gypsum and release the heavy metal impurities within it more quickly and provides new possibilities to treat similar solid waste containing gypsum or minerals with hydration water.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-023-29472-yDOI Listing

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