Degradation of monoethanolamine in aqueous Solution by Fenton's reagent with Biological post-treatment

Harimurti, S. and Dutta, B.K. and Ariff, I.F.B.M. and Chakrabarti, S. and Vione, D. (2010) Degradation of monoethanolamine in aqueous Solution by Fenton's reagent with Biological post-treatment. Water, Air, and Soil Pollution, 211 (1-4). pp. 273-286. ISSN 00496979

Full text not available from this repository.
Official URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2....

Abstract

Alkanolamines in the wastewater from gas treating plants are not readily biodegradable. In this work, we have investigated the effectiveness of the Fenton's reagent (H2O2-Fe2+) to treat monoethanolamine (MEA) as a model compound in simulated wastewater. Degradation studies were carried out in a jacketed glass reactor. The effects of concentrations of ferrous sulfate, hydrogen peroxide, and the pH of a solution on the rate of reaction were determined. A pH of 3 was found to be the optimum. The degradation reaction proceeds very fast at the beginning but slows down significantly at a longer time. A larger fractional degradation of the organics in solution was observed if the initial chemical oxygen demand (COD) of the feed solution was high. Gradual addition of H2O2 to the reaction mixture increased the COD removal by about 60 compared to one-time addition of the reagent at the beginning of the process. A rate equation for mineralization of the amine was developed on the basis of a simplified mechanistic model, and the lumped value of the rate constant for COD removal was determined. A partially degraded MEA solution as well as "pure" MEA was subjected to biological oxidation by activated sludge. The former substrate degraded much faster. The degradation rate and biomass generation data could be fitted by the Monod kinetic equations. © 2009 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: cited By 31
Uncontrolled Keywords: Activated sludge; Advanced oxidation; Alkanolamines; Aqueous solutions; Biological oxidations; Biological post-treatment; Biomass generation; COD removal; Degradation rate; Degradation reaction; Degradation study; Feed solution; Fenton's reagent; Fenton's reagents; Ferrous sulfate; Gas-treating plants; Glass reactors; Mechanistic models; Model compound; Monod kinetic; Monoethanolamine; Organics; Rate equations; Rate of reaction; Reaction mixture; Simulated wastewater, Chemical contamination; Computer simulation; Degradation; Gas plants; Hydrogen peroxide; Integral equations; Oxidation; Oxygen; pH effects; Rate constants; Solutions; Wastewater; Wastewater treatment, Chemical oxygen demand, ethanolamine; ferrous gluconate; ferrous sulfate; hydrogen peroxide, aqueous solution; biodegradation; bioreactor; catalysis; chemical oxygen demand; computer simulation; ethanol; hydrogen peroxide; numerical model; oxidation; pH; reaction kinetics; reaction rate, aqueous solution; article; biodegradation; chemical oxygen demand; controlled study; Fenton reaction; hydrogen bond; mineralization; oxidation; pH; waste water management
Depositing User: Mr Ahmad Suhairi UTP
Date Deposited: 09 Nov 2023 15:49
Last Modified: 09 Nov 2023 15:49
URI: https://khub.utp.edu.my/scholars/id/eprint/1179

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item