SOLVENT WASHING OF PCP CONTAMINATED SOILS WITH ANAEROBIC TREATMENT OFWASH FLUIDS

Citation
Ap. Khodadoust et al., SOLVENT WASHING OF PCP CONTAMINATED SOILS WITH ANAEROBIC TREATMENT OFWASH FLUIDS, Water environment research, 66(5), 1994, pp. 692-697
Citations number
15
Categorie Soggetti
Limnology,"Environmental Sciences","Water Resources","Engineering, Environmental
Journal title
ISSN journal
10614303
Volume
66
Issue
5
Year of publication
1994
Pages
692 - 697
Database
ISI
SICI code
1061-4303(1994)66:5<692:SWOPCS>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
A solvent washing procedure for the removal of pentachlorophenol (PCP) from contaminated soils is presented. This procedure can be used in b oth in-situ and above-ground soil washing applications. The in-situ so lvent washing (flushing) of soil was simulated by continuously flushin g solvent through a packed bed of soil until the effluent PCP concentr ations decrease to below the detection limit. The above-ground (ex-sit u) soil washing was simulated by batch tests (reverse isotherms) condu cted on PCP contaminated soil. Acetone was found to be less effective than ethanol in flushing PCP from contaminated soil. Soil solvent flus hing was evaluated for 20 X 40, 60 X 80, and 100 X 140 U.S. Mesh size soil fractions loaded with 100 ppm of PCP. The flushing solvent, 95% e thanol, was applied at three different flow rates. Lower solvent flow rates were more effective, for the same solvent throughput, than highe r flow rates in extracting PCP thus suggesting that desorption kinetic s was rate limiting. The 20 X 40 U.S. Mesh soil was flushed with vario us ethanol and water mixtures; the 75% ethanol solution removed more P CP than other mixtures. Batch extraction tests, conducted on 20 X 40, 100 X 140 U.S. Mesh size soil and the clay fraction of the same soil, revealed that 50% and 75% ethanol and water solutions consistently rem oved the highest amounts of PCP. The wash fluids were fed to an expand ed-bed anaerobic granular activated carbon (GAC) bioreactor, where the PCP content of the wash fluid was biodegraded and the ethanol served as the primary substrate.