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Treatment of chromate‐polluted groundwater in a 200 dm<sup>3</sup> pilot bioreactor fed with hydrogen
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2006
Year
EngineeringBiological Waste TreatmentGroundwater RemediationWastewater TreatmentAbstract ChromateChemical EngineeringPilot BioreactorBioremediationWater TreatmentEnvironmental MicrobiologySoil BioremediationEcotoxicologyChemical IndustryWater TechnologyChromate‐polluted GroundwaterEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental RemediationMicrobiologyMicrobiological Degradation
Abstract Chromate is a highly soluble, toxic and carcinogenic oxyanion commonly found in groundwaters and soils. A 200 dm 3 pilot bioreactor was designed to treat typical Cr(VI)‐polluted groundwater. A fixed bed column was filled with pozzolana, inoculated with a bacterial population containing the sulfate‐reducing organism Desulfomicrobium norvegicum and fed with an H 2 + CO 2 gas mixture. The pilot was operated under continuous feed conditions for 3 months, first with a synthetic solution and then with real polluted groundwater containing 15 mg dm −3 Cr(VI). The residence time was decreased to 7 h, while the Cr(VI) concentration in the outflow remained lower than 0.2 mg dm −3 . The bacterial population did not need any organic carbon supply thanks to acetogenesis. The highest Cr(VI) reduction rate was 2.2 mg dm −3 h −1 . The CO 2 flow rate was regulated in order to maintain the pH in the interval 7.5–8.5. The CO 2 consumption rate increased with feed flow rate and sulfate reduction activity. The process worked satisfactorily between 10 and 35 °C. Copyright © 2006 Society of Chemical Industry
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