Modeling of polychlorinated biphenyl removal from contaminated soil using steam
Autor: | Pingkuan Di, Harry A. Dwyer, Daniel P.Y. Chang |
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Rok vydání: | 2002 |
Předmět: |
Mass transfer coefficient
Persistent organic pollutant Environmental remediation Environmental engineering Polychlorinated biphenyl Water Soil science General Chemistry Human decontamination Models Theoretical Soil contamination Polychlorinated Biphenyls chemistry.chemical_compound chemistry Mass transfer Calibration Pressure Environmental Chemistry Soil Pollutants Environmental Pollutants Volatilization Porosity Environmental Pollution Microwaves |
Zdroj: | Environmental sciencetechnology. 36(8) |
ISSN: | 0013-936X |
Popis: | Microwave-generated steam technology shows promise as an effective remediation alternative for removal of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) from contaminated soils, based on our laboratory-scale experiments. The overall process can be described by a nonisothermal, unsteady, coupled heat and multicomponent PCB mass-transport model in a multiphase, variably saturated, porous soil medium. In this paper, a multicomponent PCB mass-transport model is presented that assumes evaporation is an important removal mechanism and that is based on first-order mass transfer between the interface of PCB films and the bulk steam. The model was calibrated using the experimental data, and the calibrated model was verified by computational mass-balance checks and comparisons with laboratory-scale column experimental results. From a qualitative point of view, the calibrated model successfully simulated the transport of PCBs in variably saturated soil media. The calculated increase/decrease factors of physicochemical properties of PCBs as a function of temperature in the soil, water, and free phases were consistent with the model hypothesis of an evaporation process. The effects of mass-transfer coefficients and initial PCB concentrations in the soils on PCB removal rates were investigated using the numerical code. It was determined that the PCB removal rates were sensitive to mass-transfer coefficients and initial PCB concentrations. Although the steam:soil mass ratios required to achieve a given percentage removal were lower for lower initial PCB soil concentrations, steam: soil mass ratios required to achieve a given unit mass removal were higherfor lower initial PCB soil concentrations. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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