Advancement of high power ultrasound technology for the destruction of surface active waterborne contaminants

The current paper explores recent advances in sonochemical techniques to improve the ultrasound-mediated degradation efficiency of surface active, waterborne contaminants. Sonochemical degradation efficiency of surface active contaminants generally has a strong dependence on the concentration of con...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ultrasonics sonochemistry 2010-08, Vol.17 (6), p.1021-1026
Hauptverfasser: Sostaric, Joe Z., Weavers, Linda K.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The current paper explores recent advances in sonochemical techniques to improve the ultrasound-mediated degradation efficiency of surface active, waterborne contaminants. Sonochemical degradation efficiency of surface active contaminants generally has a strong dependence on the concentration of contaminant at the gas/solution surface of cavitation bubbles. This in turn depends on the thermodynamic and diffusion/kinetic-controlled adsorption properties of the surfactant at the rapidly pulsating gas/solution surface of acoustic cavitation bubbles. The adsorption properties of surfactants can be exploited to enhance their sonochemical decomposition by varying ultrasound exposure parameters such that changes in the nature of the bubble population (especially the bubble life-time and rate of pulsations) cause changes in the amount of surfactant that adsorbs to the gas/solution interface of cavitation bubbles. Herein we describe recent results on the effect of ultrasound frequency and pulsing mode on sonochemical degradation of surfactants in aqueous solutions and show how the exposure parameters can be adjusted in ways to produce more efficient decomposition of contaminants, even under exposure conditions where seemingly poor sonochemical activity is detected in the bulk solution. The relevance of these results to scale-up of ultrasound decontamination processes is discussed.
ISSN:1350-4177
1873-2828
DOI:10.1016/j.ultsonch.2009.11.010