| Literature DB >> 27639027 |
Hongjiang Peng1, Liya Xu1, Wei Zhang2, Fuwen Liu1, Xin Lu1, Wei Lu1, Muhammad Danish1, Kuangfei Lin1.
Abstract
The feasibility of using base persulfate (PS) and coupled with other activation methods (heat, ultrasonic and Fe2+gluconate) was first explored for the removal of decabromodiphenyl ether (BDE209) in a soil system, and various factors were also investigated. The results showed that the removal of BDE209 followed a pseudo-first-order model. Interestingly, the rate constant (k1) indicated a good power exponential relationship with initial PS (k1=0.018×[PS]00.437, R2=0.983, [PS]0=0.02-0.5M) or BDE209 (k1=0.029×e-0.038×[BDE209]0, R2=0.999, [BDE209]0=10-50mgkg-1) concentration, respectively. Additionally, k1 well fitted the Arrhenius equation at the temperature range of 25 to 55°C, and the calculated activation energy (Ea) approximately was 41.2kJmol-1. The removal efficiency could be enhanced in the presence of ultrasound due to increasing the amount of BDE209 molecules desorbed from soil and organic matters. Finally, nine intermediate products were identified during the heat and base co-activated PS oxidation process, and the possible reaction pathways were further proposed.Entities:
Keywords: BDE209; Degradation performance; Free radical; Persulfate; Rate constant
Year: 2016 PMID: 27639027 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.09.057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963