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Pilot Scale Applications of Microwave Heating for Soil Remediation.
- 1.0491066 - ÚCHP 2019 RIV CH eng J - Journal Article
Kroužek, J. - Durdák, V. - Hendrych, J. - Mašín, P. - Sobek, Jiří - Špaček, P.
Pilot Scale Applications of Microwave Heating for Soil Remediation.
Chemical Engineering and Processing: Process Intensification. Roč. 130, AUG 2018 (2018), s. 53-60. ISSN 0255-2701. E-ISSN 1873-3204
R&D Projects: GA TA ČR TA01020383; GA TA ČR TA04020981
Institutional support: RVO:67985858
Keywords : microwave remediation * hazardous waste * practical experience
OECD category: Chemical process engineering
Impact factor: 3.031, year: 2018 ; AIS: 0.549, rok: 2018
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cep.2018.05.010
Thermal remediation technologies are very efficient for the removal of lipophilic organic contaminants from solid waste or soil. Compared to conventional heating method that is energy consuming due to the low thermal conductivity of contaminated material, microwaves bring several benefits for thermal solids treatment. There are three different approaches for the application of microwave heating for remediation - 1) contaminated material heating in a kiln, 2) the in-situ heating of contaminated surfaces and 3) the in-situ heating of subsurface soil environment. We developed and tested the pilot units for these applications including efficient off-gas treatment system. The pilot remediation tests were performed using 6 kW 2.45 GHz industrial microwave generators for the treatment of materials from several contaminated sites. During the tests, we measured detailed spatial temperature and contaminants mass distribution in the tested material. The achieved results confirmed promising data from laboratory tests and the high efficiencies of different contaminants removal were achieved at mild temperatures and with low energy consumption. Moreover, we gained important empirical knowledge about these innovative remediation technologies that has allowed to determine practical limitations for further scale-up and field applications or to validate future numerical models.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0285149
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