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In situ treatment of contaminated soil using persulfate activated by sulfidated zero-valent iron. | LitMetric

In situ treatment of contaminated soil using persulfate activated by sulfidated zero-valent iron.

Chemosphere

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Pusan National University, 2, Busandaehak-ro 63beon-gil, Geumjeong-gu, Busan, 46241, Republic of Korea. Electronic address:

Published: October 2024

Soil contamination with hazardous substances like phenol poses significant environmental and health risks. In situ soil mixing can be a promising technological solution to this challenge. A persulfate and sulfidated zero-valent iron (S-ZVI) system for remediating contaminated soil was developed and tested to be suited to in situ soil mixing. S-ZVI was synthesized using a ball mill process, and the optimal sulfur to iron molar ratio for effectively removing phenol from soil removal without pyrophoric risks was 0.12. Soil slurry experiments were performed, and the best phenol oxidation results (high stoichiometric efficiency and sustained oxidation after mixing) were achieved at a persulfate to S-ZVI molar ratio of 2:1 and a persulfate to phenol molar ratio of 8:1. A high organic matter content of the silty clay fraction of the soil strongly suppressed persulfate activation, so suppressed phenol removal and increased persulfate consumption. Electron spin resonance and radical scavenging tests confirmed that hydroxyl and sulfate radicals were present during the degradation of phenol. While sulfate radicals predominantly facilitated degradation in the soil, both sulfate and hydroxyl radicals were crucial in the aqueous phase in the absence of soil organic matter. In situ soil mixing simulation tests indicated that the persulfate and S-ZVI doses and the mixing rate and duration strongly affected the efficacy of the system, and the optimal conditions for phenol removal were determined. The results indicated that the persulfate/S-ZVI system could be tuned to achieve sustained persulfate activation and to remediate contaminated soil employing in situ soil mixing technique.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.143440DOI Listing

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