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Estimating hydrogen sulphide dissipation rate constant under the influence of different chemical dosing

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 23:17 authored by Veeriah JegatheesanVeeriah Jegatheesan, Sara Abdikheibari, Nyoman Marleni, Shaun Phelan, Kyoohong Park, Steve Bagshaw, Leanne Farago, Li Shu
Sewer odour and corrosion is caused by the reduction of sulphide ions and the release of hydrogen sulphide gas (H2S) into the sewer atmosphere. The reduction of sulphide is determined by its dissipation rate which depends on many processes such as emission, oxidation and precipitation that prevail in wastewater environments. Two factors that mainly affect the dissipation of sulphide are sewer hydraulics and wastewater characteristics; modification to the latter by dosing certain chemicals is known as one of the mitigation strategies to control the dissipation of sulphide. This study investigates the dissipation of sulphide in the presence of NaOH, Mg(OH)2, Ca(NO3)2 and FeCl3 and the dissipation rate is developed as a function of hydraulic parameters such as the slope of the sewer and the velocity gradient. Experiments were conducted in a 18 m experimental sewer pipe with adjustable slope to which, firstly no chemical was added and secondly each of the above mentioned chemicals was supplemented in turn. A dissipation rate constant of 2 106 for sulphide was obtained from experiments with no chemical addition. This value was then used to predict the sulphide concentration that was responsible for the emission of H2S gas in the presence of one of the above mentioned four chemicals. It was found that the performance of alkali substances (NaOH and Mg(OH)2) in suppressing the H2S gas emission was excellent while ferric chloride showed a moderate mitigating effect due to its slow reaction kinetics. Calcium nitrate was of little value since the wastewater used in this study experienced almost no biological growth. Thus the effectiveness of selected chemicals in suppressing H2S gas emission had the following order: NaOH > Mg(OH)2 > FeCl3 > Ca(NO3)2.

History

Journal

International Biodeterioration and Biodegradation

Volume

101

Start page

47

End page

55

Total pages

9

Publisher

Elsevier Ltd

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006057643

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-02-11

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