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Research On The Mechanism Of Sequestration Of Antimonite In Aqueous Solution By Zerovalent Iron Under Weak Magnetic Field

Posted on:2017-01-30Degree:MasterType:Thesis
Country:ChinaCandidate:S LinFull Text:PDF
GTID:2271330488951986Subject:Environmental Science and Engineering
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Many oxyanion-forming metals (As, Sb, Se, Tc, etc.) can be removed from water by adsorption and/or redox reactions involving iron oxides, including the oxides associated with zerovalent iron (ZVI). The rate of antimonite (Sb(Ⅲ) hydrolysis species) removal by ZVI was determined in open, well-mixed batch reactors as a function of experimental factors, including aging of the ZVI, addition of Fe(Ⅱ), Sb dose, mixing rate, pH, initial concentrations of Sb(Ⅲ), etc. However, the largest effect observed was the roughly 6-8 fold increase in Sb(Ⅲ) removal rate due to the application of a weak magnetic field (WMF) during the experiments. The WMF effect on Sb removal arises from stimulated corrosion and delayed passivation of the ZVI, as evidenced by time series correlation analysis of "geochemical" properties (DO, Fetot, Eh, and pH) measured synchronously in each experiment. The removal of Sb under the conditions of this study was mainly due to oxidation of Sb(Ⅲ) to Sb(V) and adsorption and coprecipitation onto the iron oxides formed from accelerated corrosion of ZVI, as evidenced by Sb K-edge XANES, EXAFS, and XPS. The degree of the WMF enhancement for Sb(Ⅲ) was found to be similar to the WMF effect reported previously for Sb(Ⅴ), As(Ⅲ), As(Ⅴ), and Se(Ⅵ).
Keywords/Search Tags:Zero-valent iron, Weak magnetic field, Sb(Ⅲ), Iron oxide, Metal oxyanions, Sequestration, Oxidation, Adsorption, Depassivation, Aging, Corrosion
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