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Effect of Fe0 Quantity on the Efficiency of Integrated Microbial-Fe0 Treatment Processes

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Journal Chemosphere
Date 2003 Nov 26
PMID 14637339
Citations 3
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Abstract

Batch experiments were conducted with different reaction systems to investigate how the treatment efficiency of integrated microbial-Fe0 processes is affected by the amount of Fe0 added. Abiotic experiments with hexavalent chromium and carbon tetrachloride mixtures corroborated that different pollutants could compete for reactive sites on the iron surface, which would hinder specific degradation rates when the available Fe0 surface area is relatively small (e.g., 11 m(2) l(-1)). In such cases, reductive precipitation of chromium could occlude reactive sites and significantly inhibit removal efficiency. Microbial participation in the cleanup process was also influenced by the amount of Fe0 added. Increasing the Fe0 dose (and thus the available surface area) had a stimulatory effect possibly due to a higher production of cathodic H2, which can be used as electron donor for reductive biotransformation of many pollutants. However, high Fe0 doses had an inhibitory effect due to a corrosion-induced increase in pH beyond the optimum range of the bacteria. This suggest that there may be a system-specific, optimum quantity of Fe0 that satisfies availability requirements to preclude contaminant competition for reactive sites and biological requirements for H2 production while minimizing inhibitory increases in pH. Results also confirmed extensive RDX mineralization in bioaugmented (but not in abiotic) Fe0 systems, and support the notion that permeable reactive iron barriers performance might be enhanced by the participation of some microorganisms.

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