Combined pollution in groundwater has become increasingly serious. Adding emulsified vegetable oil to an aquifer is an effective method to remediate multiple pollutants. However, the efficiency and threshold values for… Click to show full abstract
Combined pollution in groundwater has become increasingly serious. Adding emulsified vegetable oil to an aquifer is an effective method to remediate multiple pollutants. However, the efficiency and threshold values for the remediation of groundwater contaminated by both nitrate and hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) stimulated by emulsified vegetable oil remain unclear. In this study, emulsified vegetable oil was used for the first time to simultaneously remediate nitrate and Cr(VI) in groundwater. The results suggested that the addition of emulsified vegetable oil could effectively remediate nitrate and Cr(VI), and there were interplay effects between nitrate and Cr(VI). Nitrate promoted Cr(VI) removal, while Cr(VI) inhibited nitrate reduction. The remediation thresholds for nitrate and Cr(VI) alone were 1600 mg/L and 10 mg/L, respectively (emulsified vegetable oil = 7 g/L). For combined pollution, the remediation threshold values were 868.10 mg/L for nitrate and 12.43 mg/L for Cr(VI) (emulsified vegetable oil = 7 g/L). The dose of emulsified vegetable oil played an important role in the threshold value. When the concentration of emulsified vegetable oil was 10.8 g/L, the maximum threshold values were 1379.79 mg/L for nitrate and 12.67 mg/L for Cr(VI). When the pollutant concentration was below the threshold value, the contaminant could be completely removed.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.