A long-term bench-scale investigation of permanganate consumption by aquifer materials.

Citation:

Xu, X. , & Thomson, N. R. . (2009). A long-term bench-scale investigation of permanganate consumption by aquifer materials. J. Contam. Hydrol. doi:10.1016/j.jconhyd.2009.09.001.

Abstract:

 

Xu, X., N.R. Thomson, 2009. A long-term bench-scale investigation of permanganate consumption by aquifer materials. J. Contam. Hydrol. doi:10.1016/j.jconhyd.2009.09.001.

In situ chemical oxidation (ISCO) applications using permanganate involve the injection or release of permanganate into the subsurface to destroy various target contaminants. Naturally occurring reduced components associated with aquifer materials can exert a significant oxidant demand thereby reducing the amount of permanganate available for the destruction of contaminants as well as reducing the overall rate of oxidation. Quantification of this natural oxidant demand (NOD) is a requirement for site-specific assessment and the design of cost-effective oxidant delivery systems. To further our understanding of the interaction between permanganate and aquifer materials, aerobic and anaerobic aquifer materials from eight representative sites throughout North America were tested in a series of systematic bench-scale experiments. Various permanganate to aquifer solids mass loading ratios at different initial permanganate concentrations in well-mixed batch reactors were monitored for >300 days. All NOD temporal profiles demonstrated an initial fast consumption rate followed by a persistent slower consumption rate. The data generated show that the mass loading ratio, the initial permanganate concentration, and the nature and quantity of reduced aquifer material species are the main factors controlling permanganate consumption rates. A higher initial permanganate concentration or a larger mass loading ratio produced a larger fast NOD consumption rate and generated a corresponding higher maximum NOD value Hence, both the NOD temporal profile and the maximum NOD are not single-valued but are heavily dependent on the experimental conditions. Predictive relationships were developed to estimate the maximum NOD and the NOD at 7 days based on aquifer material properties. The concentration of manganese oxides deposited on the aquifer solids was highly correlated with the mass of permanganate consumed suggesting that passivation of the NOD reaction sites occurred due to the formation of manganese oxide coating on the grains. A long-term NOD kinetic model was developed assuming a single fast and slow reacting oxidizable aquifer material species, passivation of NOD reaction sites, and the presence of an autocatalytic reaction. The developed model was able to successful capture the observed NOD temporal profiles, and can be used to estimate in situ NOD behavior using batch reactor experimental data. The use of batch tests to provide data representative of in situ conditions should be used with caution.

 

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