TECHNICAL PAPERS
Aug 15, 2002

Comparison of Liquid and Gas-Phase Photooxidation of MTBE: Synthetic and Field Samples

Publication: Journal of Environmental Engineering
Volume 128, Issue 9

Abstract

The feasibility of photooxidation treatment of methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) in water was investigated using two systems: (1) a slurry falling film photoreactor and (2) an integrated air stripping with gas phase photooxidation system. Methyl tert-butyl ether-contaminated synthetic water and field samples from contaminated sites were used for these studies. Using a TiO2 slurry (0.1 g/L; Degussa P25) flowing down at a rate of up to 0.26 L/min over the inner surface of a glass tube surrounding a 1-kW medium pressure mercury lamp, more than 99% of MTBE in the synthetic samples, initially at 1 mg/L, was degraded within 90 min. The major degradation products from MTBE were tert-butyl alcohol, tert-butyl formate, and small amounts of acetone. However, the degradation of MTBE and its byproducts in contaminated groundwater samples was hindered significantly by dissolved metals such as Fe2+, chloride ions, and aromatic organic species. Integrating air stripping with gas-phase photocatalysis is an an effective alternative that would not be affected by the water chemistry. The reaction rates for MTBE degradation in the gas phase are orders of magnitude faster than in aqueous solution.

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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Journal of Environmental Engineering
Journal of Environmental Engineering
Volume 128Issue 9September 2002
Pages: 782 - 790

History

Received: Feb 13, 2002
Accepted: May 6, 2002
Published online: Aug 15, 2002
Published in print: Sep 2002

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Authors

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Endalkachew Sahle-Demessie
U.S. EPA, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, Sustainable Technology Division, Cincinnati, OH 45268 (corresponding author).
Teri Richardson
U.S. EPA, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, Sustainable Technology Division, Cincinnati, OH 45268.
Catherine B. Almquist
Miami Univ., School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Oxford, OH 45056.
Unnikrishnan R. Pillai
U.S. EPA, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, Sustainable Technology Division, Cincinnati, OH 45268.

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