4.7 Article

Chemical reduction of an unbuffered nitrate solution using catalyzed and uncatalyzed nanoscale iron particles

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 127, Issue 1-3, Pages 102-110

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2005.06.029

Keywords

nanoscale; iron; bimetals; denitrification; nitrate

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Uncatalyzed and catalyzed nanoscale Fe-0 systems were employed for the denitrification of unbuffered 40 mg N L-I nitrate solutions at initial neutral pH. Compared to microscale Fe-0 (< 100mesh), the efficiency and rate of nitrate removal using uncatalyzed and catalyzed nano-Fe-0 were highly promoted, in which the maximum promoted rate was obtained using copper-catalyzed nano-Fe-0 (nano-Cu/Fe). Nitrate first-order degradation rate constants (k(obs)) decreased significantly (> 70%) with aged nano-Fe-0 and aged nano-Cu/Fe, and were recovered with NaBH4 as reductants at levels of about 85 and 75%, respectively. Activation energies (Ea) of nitrate reduction over the temperature range of 10-60 degrees C were 42.5 kJ mol(-1) for microscale Fe-0, 25.8 kJ mol(-1) for nano-Fe-0 and 16.8 kJ mol(-1) for nano-Cu/Fe. Unlike microscale Fe-0, the kinetics of denitrification by nano-Fe-0 and nano-Cu/Fe began to show characteristics of mass transport in addition to chemical reaction control. Ammonium was the predominant end product in all the systems. However, as for nitrite, 40% of the degraded nitrate persisted in the nano-Cu/Fe system. Thus, relative to nano-Cu/Fe, nano-Fe-0 is a potential reductant for denitrification of groundwater as far as toxic nitrite generation is concern. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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