Chromium transport, oxidation, and adsorption in manganese-coated sand

Hillol Guha, James E. Saiers, Scott Brooks, Phil Jardine, Krishnaswamy Jayachandran

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

72 Scopus citations

Abstract

We examine how the processes of advection, dispersion, oxidation-reduction, and adsorption combine to affect the transport of chromium through columns packed with pyrolusite (β-MnO2)-coated sand. We find that β-MnO2 effectively oxidizes Cr(III) to Cr(VI) and that the extent of oxidation is sensitive to changes in pH, pore water velocity, and influent concentrations of Cr(III). Cr(III) oxidation rates, although initially high, decline well before the supply of β-MnO2 is depleted, suggesting that a reaction product inhibits the conversion of Cr(III) to Cr(VI). Rate-limited reactions govern the weak adsorption of each chromium species, with Cr(III) adsorption varying directly with pH and Cr(VI) adsorption varying inversely with pH. The breakthrough data on chromium transport can be matched closely by calculations of a simple model that accounts for (1) advective-dispersive transport of Cr(III), Cr(VI), and dissolved oxygen, (2) first-order kinetics adsorption of the reduced and oxidized chromium species, and (3) nonlinear rate-limited oxidation of Cr(III) to Cr(VI). Our work supplements the limited database on the transport of redox-sensitive metals in porous media and provides a means for quantifying the coupled processes that contribute to this transport.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)311-334
Number of pages24
JournalJournal of Contaminant Hydrology
Volume49
Issue number3-4
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2001

Funding

The Environmental Management Science Program of the US Department of Energy sponsored this research. We thank two anonymous reviewers for their thorough review of the manuscript.

Keywords

  • Chromium
  • Geochemical models
  • Kinetics
  • Oxidation
  • Solute transport

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