See more from this Division:
S11 Soils & Environmental Quality
See more from this Session:
General Soils and Environmental Quality: II
Monday, November 1, 2010
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC, Lower Level
Yu-Min Tzou, Feng-Yi Lin, Chien-Hui Syu and Ying-Shuian Shen, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung, Taiwan
Removal
of Cr(VI) on a peat soil as influenced by a
carbonization process
Fire is a natural process that occurs in the
terrestrial areas; however, it can be also initiated anthropogenically
in many Asian countries. For instance, open-burning of agricultural wastes, such
as rice residues, have been a common activity on the farmlands for decades in Taiwan. These
natural or human-induced fires influence not only the terrestrial C cycling but
also the organic and inorganic compositions of soils beneath due to heat
transfer. The heat transfer into the soils is similar to a carbonized or pyrolyzed process due to the limited O2 content
in soil pores. As a result, the adsorptive capacities of the fire-impacted
soils for pollutants may be accordingly affected. In this study, a Taiwan peat
soil was carbonized in an oven up to 600 oC
under a limited air to simulate the soils heated under a surface fire. Then, a
batch experiment was conducted by adding 10 mg/L Cr(VI)
into the carbonized soils (2g/L).
Results showed that 200 oC-treated peat
soil exhibited the highest Cr(VI) removal (3 mg/g
soil); however, Cr(VI) removal decreased with an increase in carbonized
temperatures. Since the concentration of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) also reached
the highest at 200 oC (15.9 mg/L), we
expected that a portion of large organic molecules may be decomposed into small
and loosed bound molecules upon 200oC carbonization. Thus, high DOC
concentration associated with the exposure of some new sorptive
sites may contribute to the high Cr(VI) removal on a
200 oC carbonized soil. With an increase
of carbonized temperature to 600 oC, a
slight decrease of Cr(VI) removal was observed even if
the DOC significantly decreased. The formation of aromatic C upon the carbonization
of the peat soil may become a dominant factor controlling Cr(VI)
removal.