4.8 Article

A polymer membrane containing Fe0 as a contaminant barrier

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 7, Pages 2264-2270

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es034601c

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A poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) membrane containing iron (Fe-0) particles was developed and tested as a model barrier for contaminant containment. Carbon tetrachloride, copper (Cu2+), nitrobenzene, 4-nitroacetophenone, and chromate (CrO42-) were selected as model contaminants. Compared with a pure PVA membrane, the Fe-0/PVA membrane can increase the breakthrough lag time for Cu2+ and carbon tetrachloride by more than 100-fold. The increase in the lag time was smaller for nitrobenzene and 4-nitroacetophenone, which stoichiometric ally require more iron and for which the PVA membrane has a higher permeability. The effect of Fe-0 was even smaller for CrO42- because of its slow reaction. Forty-five percent of the iron, based on the content in the dry membrane prior to hydration, was consumed by reaction with Cu2+ and 15% by reaction with carbon tetrachloride. Similarly, 25%,17%, and 6% of the iron was consumed by nitrobenzene, 4-nitroacetophenone, and CrO42-, respectively. These percentages approximately double when the loss of iron during membrane hydration is considered. The permeability of the Fe-0/PVA membrane after breakthrough was within a factor of 3 for that of pure PVA, consistent with theory. These results suggest that polymer membranes with embedded Fe-0 have potential as practical contaminant barriers.

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