4.8 Article

Applications of ultrasound in NAPL remediation: Sonochemical degradation of TCE in aqueous surfactant solutions

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 14, Pages 3019-3024

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es0018926

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Surfactant-enhanced pump-and-treat technologies increase the efficiency of nonaqueous-phase liquids (NAPLs) removal from soils. However, high concentrations of surfactants in groundwater impose severe limitations to water treatment. in this paper, we explore the applicability of ultrasonic irradiation as an alternative method for surfactant recovery and contaminant degradation. The combined effects of temperature, initial substrate concentration, and concentration of added surfactant (sodium dodecyl sulfate, SDS)were analyzed for the sonolysis of trichloroethylene (TCE) in batch experiments at an ultrasonic frequency of 500 kHz and 77 W/L applied power density. In the range of 5-30 degreesC, TCE sonolysis becomes faster at higher temperatures, both in the absence and in the presence of surfactant. This indicates that gas-phase pyrolysis prevails over other chemical reactions in the liquid phase. Inhibition of TCE sonolysis was observed in the presence of surfactant at all SDS concentrations. Changes in the initial TCE concentration (from 250 muM to 1.2 mM) showed no effect on the degradation rates in the presence of SDS, For surfactant levels below its critical micelle concentration (cmc), the inhibition of TCE sonolysis exhibited a highly nonlinear dependence with increasing SDS concentration. A correlation was observed in this range between the relative inhibition of sonolysis and the decreasing surface tension of the solutions. Above the cmc up to an SDS concentration of 5%, the reaction rate decreased less markedly. Micellar sequestration of the contaminant seems to be the main reason for this additional inhibition. Bubble growth prior to collapse may incorporate some of the TCE dissolved in the micelles through their adsorption in the expanding bubble walls, thus partially overcoming the scavenging effect due to micellar entrapment of the contaminant.

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