Modeling the Permeability Loss of Metallic Iron Water Filtration Systems

2013 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Modeling the Permeability Loss of Metallic Iron Water Filtration Systems​
Care, S.; Crane, R.; Calabro, P. S.; Ghauch, A.; Temgoua, E. & Noubactep, C.​ (2013) 
CLEAN - Soil Air Water41(3) pp. 275​-282​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/clen.201200167 

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Authors
Care, Sabine; Crane, Richard; Calabro, Paolo S.; Ghauch, Antoine; Temgoua, Emile; Noubactep, Chicgoua
Abstract
Over the past 30 years the literature has burgeoned with in situ approaches for groundwater remediation. Of the methods currently available, the use of metallic iron (Fe0) in permeable reactive barrier (PRB) systems is one of the most commonly applied. Despite such interest, an increasing amount of experimental and field observations have reported inconsistent Fe0 barrier operation compared to contemporary theory. In the current work, a critical review of the physical chemistry of aqueous Fe0 corrosion in porous media is presented. Subsequent implications for the design of Fe0 filtration systems are modeled. The results suggest that: (i) for the pH range of natural waters (>4.5), the high volumetric expansion of Fe0 during oxidation and precipitation dictates that Fe0 should be mixed with a non-expansive material; (ii) naturally occurring solute precipitates have a negligible impact on permeability loss compared to Fe0 expansive corrosion; and (iii) the proliferation of H2 metabolizing bacteria may contribute to alleviate permeability loss. As a consequence, it is suggested that more emphasis must be placed on future work with regard to considering the Fe0 PRB system as a physical (size-exclusion) water filter device.
Issue Date
2013
Journal
CLEAN - Soil Air Water 
ISSN
1863-0650
Language
English

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