Reductive immobilization of pertechnetate in soil and groundwater using synthetic pyrite nanoparticles

  • Lijuan Huo
  • , Wenbo Xie
  • , Tianwei Qian
  • , Xiaohong Guan
  • , Dongye Zhao*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

48 Scopus citations

Abstract

Radioactive technetium (99Tc) is of intense concern because of its toxicity and high mobility in the environment. Reduction of Tc(VII) to Tc(IV) decreases the mobility and availability of technetium in soil and groundwater. In this study, pyrite nanoparticles (FeS2) were synthesized, characterized and tested for immobilizing/removing99Tc(VII) in soil and groundwater through batch and column experiments. Influences of particle dosage, dissolved organic matter (DOM), and pH on the reductive immobilization kinetics were examined. At a dosage of 0.28 g/L as Fe, the pyrite nanoparticles were able to rapidly and completely remove 4.88 × 10−7 M of Tc(VII) by converting it to insoluble Tc(IV), with a retarded first-order rate constant of 0.30 h−1. The presence of high concentrations of DOM only moderately inhibited the reduction effectiveness, and acidic pH was more favorable for Tc(VII) reduction. Column experiments showed that embedding a 0.8 cm pyrite layer of the material in a soil bed, simulating a permeable reactive barrier, was able to retard technetium transport 710 times more than a model sandy soil. The results demonstrated that the pyrite particles may serve as a long-lasting reactive material to remediate Tc-contaminated soil, groundwater and solid wastes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)456-465
Number of pages10
JournalChemosphere
Volume174
DOIs
StatePublished - 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Groundwater remediation
  • Pyrite
  • Radionuclide
  • Reductive immobilization
  • Soil remediation
  • Technetium

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