4.4 Article

Effects of Natural Organic Matter on PCB-Activated Carbon Sorption Kinetics: Implications for Sediment Capping Applications

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
Volume 39, Issue 4, Pages 1359-1368

Publisher

AMER SOC AGRONOMY
DOI: 10.2134/jeq2009.0505

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Cooperative Institute for Coastal and Estuarine Environmental Technology (CICEET)
  2. NIEHS [UTA07821]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In situ capping of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-contaminated sediments with a laver of activated carbon has been proposed, but several questions remain regarding the long-term effectiveness of this remediation strategy Here, we assess the degree to which kinetic limitations, size exclusion effects, and electrostatic repulsions impaired PCB sorption to activated carbon Sorption of 11 PCB congeners with activated carbon was studied I it fixed bed reactors with organic-free water (OFW) and Suwannee River natural organic matter (SR-NOM). made by reconstituting freeze-dried SR-NOM at a concentration of 10 mg L(-1) as carbon In the OFW test, no PCBs were detected in the column effluent over the 390-d study, indicating that PCB-activated carbon equilibrium sorption capacities may be achieved before breakthrough even at the relatively high hydraulic loading rate (HLR) of 3.1 m h(-1) However, in the SR-NOM fixed-bed test, partial PCB breakthrough occurred over the entire 320-d test (HLRs of 3 1-, 1 5-, and 0 8 m h(-1)) Simulations from a modified pore and surface diffusion model indicated that external (film diffusion) mass transfer was the dominant rate-limiting step bur that internal (pore diffusion) mass transfer limitations were also present The external mass transfer limitation was likely caused by formation of PCB NOM complexes that reduced PCB sorption through a combination of (i) increased film diffusion resistance, (ii) size exclusion effects, and (iii) electrostatic repulsive forces between the PCBs and the NOM-coated activated carbon. However, the seepage velocities in the SR-NOM fixed bed test were about 1000 times higher than would be expected in a sediment cap Therefore. additional studies arc needed to assess whether the mass transfer limitations described here would he likely to manifest themselves at the lower seepage velocities observed in practice

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available