6533b85bfe1ef96bd12ba268

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Influence of ground tire rubber on the transient loading response of a peat biofilter

J.m. Penya-rojaV. Martínez-soriaCarmen GabaldónMarta IzquierdoF.j. ÁLvarez-hornosFeliu Sempere

subject

Chromatography GasEnvironmental EngineeringPeatAcetatesXylenesManagement Monitoring Policy and LawSoilchemistry.chemical_compoundNatural rubberAir PollutionBioreactorWaste Management and DisposalAir PollutantsVolatile Organic CompoundsChromatographyXyleneGeneral MedicinePenetration (firestop)Pulp and paper industryToluenePartition coefficientchemistryvisual_artBiofiltervisual_art.visual_art_mediumAdsorptionRubberFiltrationToluene

description

Abstract The effect of using ground tire rubber (GTR) as an adsorptive material in the removal of a 2:1:1 weight mixture of n-butyl acetate, toluene and m-xylene by using a peat biofilter under different intermittent conditions was investigated. The performance of two identical size biofilters, one packed with fibrous peat alone and the other with a 3:1 (vol) fibrous peat and GTR mixture, was examined for a period of four months. Partition coefficients of both materials were measured. Values of 53, 118 and 402 L kg −1 were determined for n-butyl acetate, toluene and m-xylene in peat, respectively; and values of 40, 609 and 3035 L kg −1 were measured for the same compounds in GTR. Intermittent load feeding of 16 h per day, 5 days per week working at an EBRT of 60 s and an inlet VOC concentration of 0.3 g C m −1 , resulted in removal efficiencies higher than 90% for both biofilters, indicating that the addition of GTR did not adversely affect the behavior of the bioreactor. Full removal of n-butyl acetate was obtained for both biofilters. GTR improved the removal of the aromatics in the first part of the biofilter, facilitating lower penetration of the toluene and m-xylene into the bed. A 31-day starvation period was applied and intermittent operation subsequently restarted. In both biofilters, high removal efficiencies after a re-acclimation period of two days were achieved. A shock loading test related to 1-h peaks of three- and four-fold increases in its baseline concentration (0.30 g C m −3 ) was applied in both biofilters. For the biofilter packed with the peat and GTR mixture, attenuation greater than 60% was observed in the maximum outlet concentration when compared to the biofilter packed with peat alone.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2011.03.045