In situ remediation of mercury-contaminated groundwater through an in situ created reactive zone enabled by carboxymethyl cellulose stabilized FeS nanoparticles
Faced with worldwide mercury (Hg) contamination in groundwater, efficient in situ remediation technologies are urgently needed. Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) stabilized iron sulfide (CMC-FeS) nanoparticles have been found effective for immobilizing mercury in water and soil. Yet, the potential use o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental pollution (1987) 2024-11, Vol.361, p.124902, Article 124902 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Faced with worldwide mercury (Hg) contamination in groundwater, efficient in situ remediation technologies are urgently needed. Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) stabilized iron sulfide (CMC-FeS) nanoparticles have been found effective for immobilizing mercury in water and soil. Yet, the potential use of the nanoparticles for creating an in situ reactive zone (ISRZ) in porous geo-media has not been explored. This study assessed the transport and deliverability of CMC-FeS in sand media towards creating an ISRZ. The nanoparticles were deliverable through the saturated sand bed and the particle breakthrough/deposition profiles depended on the injection pore velocity, initial CMC-FeS concentration, and ionic strength. The transport data were well interpreted using an advection-dispersion transport model combined with the classical filtration theory. The resulting ISRZ effectively removed mercury from contaminated groundwater under typical subsurface conditions. While the operating conditions are yet to be optimized, the Hg breakthrough time can be affected by groundwater velocity, influent mercury concentration, dissolved organic matter, and co-existing metals/metalloids. The one-dimensional advection-dispersion equation well simulated the Hg breakthrough data. CMC-FeS-laden ISRZ effectively converted the more easily available Hg species to stable species. These findings reveal the potential of creating an ISRZ using CMC-FeS for in situ remediation of Hg contaminated soil and groundwater.
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•CMC-FeS transport in saturated porous media is controllable by manipulating injection conditions.•Gravitational sedimentation is the predominant removal mechanism of CMC-FeS.•CMC-FeS-laden ISRZ efficiently removes Hg from groundwater under typical subsurface conditions.•CMC-FeS-laden ISRZ performs much better than that of CMC-FeS PRBs.•One-dimensional advection-dispersion equation well simulates mercury breakthrough data. |
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ISSN: | 0269-7491 1873-6424 1873-6424 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.envpol.2024.124902 |