Zero valent iron technology has been widely used for treating contaminated wastewater these years. However, it always results in inefficiency in the processes of drying and storage due to oxidation and passivation. Th...Zero valent iron technology has been widely used for treating contaminated wastewater these years. However, it always results in inefficiency in the processes of drying and storage due to oxidation and passivation. This could be avoided by in situ synthesized zero valent iron slurry in an emergency if it possesses the same performance as zero valent iron. In this study, iron slurry was synthesized and directly used for dechlorinating trichloroe- thylene to measure its degradation efficiencies and properties. Results show that 2%(mass ratio) copper-contained zero-valent iron slurry exhibits the optimal performance compared with the other iron slurries. Batch experiments in- dicate that factors such as the concentration of trichloroethylene, pH, dissolved oxygen and equilibrium to a certain extent affect the reduction oftrichloroethylene by 2%(mass ratio) copper-contained zero-valent iron slurry. Persistent, high-efficiency degradation performance could last 7 cycles. These demonstrate that the application of coppercontained zero-valent iron slurry in treating trichloroethylene-contained wastewater is realistic.展开更多
基金the National Natural Science Foundation of China
文摘Zero valent iron technology has been widely used for treating contaminated wastewater these years. However, it always results in inefficiency in the processes of drying and storage due to oxidation and passivation. This could be avoided by in situ synthesized zero valent iron slurry in an emergency if it possesses the same performance as zero valent iron. In this study, iron slurry was synthesized and directly used for dechlorinating trichloroe- thylene to measure its degradation efficiencies and properties. Results show that 2%(mass ratio) copper-contained zero-valent iron slurry exhibits the optimal performance compared with the other iron slurries. Batch experiments in- dicate that factors such as the concentration of trichloroethylene, pH, dissolved oxygen and equilibrium to a certain extent affect the reduction oftrichloroethylene by 2%(mass ratio) copper-contained zero-valent iron slurry. Persistent, high-efficiency degradation performance could last 7 cycles. These demonstrate that the application of coppercontained zero-valent iron slurry in treating trichloroethylene-contained wastewater is realistic.