ABSTRACT
The removal of toxic hydrogen sulfide (H2S) from the air at pilot-scale with elemental sulfur recovery was evaluated using Fe-EDTA chelate as a single treatment at a pH of about 8.5. This was later combined with a compost biofiltration process for polishing the pre-treated air. Experiments were performed in a unique container system that allowed deploying either Fe-EDTA chelate or Fe-EDTA chelate/biofiltration treatment (hybrid system). The results showed the feasibility of H2S removal at concentrations between 200 and 5300 ppmv (H2S loading rates of 7-190â¯gâ¯m-3 h-1) present in fouled air. The Fe-EDTA chelate as a single treatment was able to remove nearly 99.99% of the H2S at inlet concentrations ≤ 2400 ppmv (107â¯gâ¯m-3 h-1), while the hybrid system archived undetectable outlet H2S concentrations (<1 ppmv) at inlet levels of 4000 and 5300 ppmv. At 5300 ppmv, the Fe-EDTA chelate process H2S removal efficiency decreased to 99.20% due to the limitation of oxygen mass transfer in the Fe(III) regeneration reaction. Under the previous conditions, the pH was required to be controlled by the addition of NaOH, due to the likely occurrence of undesirable parallel reactions. The elemental sulfur yield attained in the physicochemical module was 75-93% with around 80% recovered efficiently as a solid.
Subject(s)
Environmental Restoration and Remediation/methods , Ferric Compounds/pharmacology , Hydrogen Sulfide/isolation & purification , Sulfur/isolation & purification , Air Pollutants/isolation & purification , Edetic Acid/pharmacology , Iron Chelating Agents/pharmacology , Oxygen , Pilot ProjectsABSTRACT
Three models (blocking laws, combined and resistance-in-series) were applied to identify the prevailing fouling mechanisms in a submerged membrane in an up-flow anaerobic sludge blanket reactor treating municipal wastewater. Experimental runs were carried out at lab-scale with filtration periods of 4 and 10â¯min, followed by relaxation periods of one minute with and without nitrogen bubbling. In all conditions excepting one (IF4R), the blocking laws model showed a predominance of cake formation. With the combined model, cake formation coupled with intermediate, standard and complete fouling had the better fits in all conditions, excepting IF4 and IF4R. When sewage was fed, both models pointed at intermediate fouling in the absence of gas bubbling. The resistance-in-series model identified the positive effect of gas bubbling and a post-cake fouling behavior, not shown by the other two models. This modeling approach could be applied for achieving longer filtration runs in submerged UF membranes.
Subject(s)
Bioreactors , Wastewater , Filtration , Membranes, Artificial , Sewage , Waste Disposal, FluidABSTRACT
Este trabajo estudia el comportamiento hidráulico de un modelo a escala de un reactor anaerobio de lecho de lodos con flujo ascendente UASB. En el experimento se usó verde de bromocresol como trazador. El análisis de los resultados se realiza mediante los métodos de dispersión axial, tanques agitados en serie, tiempo promedio y se incorpora a éstos el modelo cinético de Michaelis-Menten. El diseño de reactores UASB vía la determinación de constantes cinéticas en el laboratorio y la información hidráulica proporcionada por el estudio lo hace menos empírico y en algunas circunstancias más preciso