Removal of chlorine-contaminated groundwater by two-stage ozonation and biostimulation methods

Trichloroethene (TCE) contamination is a critical environmental hazard, and the substrate options for its biostimulated remediation are limited. This study applied an ozonation-and-biostimulation process to remove TCE from groundwater. The substrate used, denoted as Transferred Energy Element (TEE),...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of environmental management 2022-09, Vol.317, p.115417-115417, Article 115417
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Ying-Chu, Chang, Jui-En
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Trichloroethene (TCE) contamination is a critical environmental hazard, and the substrate options for its biostimulated remediation are limited. This study applied an ozonation-and-biostimulation process to remove TCE from groundwater. The substrate used, denoted as Transferred Energy Element (TEE), was composed of natural organic materials and had a low viscosity (2.914 cP). Ten batch experiments were conducted through the application of micro–nano bubbles (MNBs) and substrates (TEE and EOS® [emulsified oil substrate]). MNBs with an average diameter of 157.5–180.8 nm effectively degraded TCE and dichloroethane within 6 min. Biostimulation using the TEE substrate effectively degraded both TCE and vinyl chloride pollutants and reached a steady state after 25 days. The two-stage dechlorination procedure with MNB treatment as the first stage enhanced TCE removal via biostimulation. MNBs reduced the TCE concentration in the first 20 min, but increased the chloride (Cl−) concentration over the following five days (∼80 mg/L). The procedure with biostimulation as the first stage and 20 min ozonation as the second stage reduced the Cl− concentration by ∼10 mg/L. The Cl− concentrations rebounded after day 25 in the EOS environment. X-ray diffraction revealed that the released Na+ from the TEE settled with Cl− as minerals in the soil. The novel two-stage method for TCE removal was found to be more effective than solo MNB treatment or biostimulation. [Display omitted] •A two-stage ozonation and biostimulation process to remove TCE contamination was succussed.•Micro-nano bubbles degraded TCE and dichloroethane within 6 min.•Biostimulation by the Transferred Energy Element substrate was reached a steady state after 25 days.•Performing treatment with MNBs as the first stage enhanced the second stage dechlorination.
ISSN:0301-4797
1095-8630
DOI:10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115417