Dechlorination of recalcitrant polychlorinated contaminants using ball milling

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

Standard

Dechlorination of recalcitrant polychlorinated contaminants using ball milling. / Birke, Volker; Mattik, Jörg; Runne, Dietlind et al.
Ecological Risks Associated with the Destruction of Chemical Weapons. Hrsg. / Vladimir Kolodkin; Wolfgang Ruck. Springer Nature B.V., 2006. S. 111-127 (NATO Security through Science Series C: Environmental Security).

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

Harvard

Birke, V, Mattik, J, Runne, D, Benning, H & Zlatovic, D 2006, Dechlorination of recalcitrant polychlorinated contaminants using ball milling. in V Kolodkin & W Ruck (Hrsg.), Ecological Risks Associated with the Destruction of Chemical Weapons. NATO Security through Science Series C: Environmental Security, Springer Nature B.V., S. 111-127. https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3137-8_13

APA

Birke, V., Mattik, J., Runne, D., Benning, H., & Zlatovic, D. (2006). Dechlorination of recalcitrant polychlorinated contaminants using ball milling. In V. Kolodkin, & W. Ruck (Hrsg.), Ecological Risks Associated with the Destruction of Chemical Weapons (S. 111-127). (NATO Security through Science Series C: Environmental Security). Springer Nature B.V.. https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3137-8_13

Vancouver

Birke V, Mattik J, Runne D, Benning H, Zlatovic D. Dechlorination of recalcitrant polychlorinated contaminants using ball milling. in Kolodkin V, Ruck W, Hrsg., Ecological Risks Associated with the Destruction of Chemical Weapons. Springer Nature B.V. 2006. S. 111-127. (NATO Security through Science Series C: Environmental Security). doi: 10.1007/1-4020-3137-8_13

Bibtex

@inbook{4475f26dd2ad4eddbf159d339e98ed74,
title = "Dechlorination of recalcitrant polychlorinated contaminants using ball milling",
abstract = "The persistence of hazardous pollutants in the environment or waste streams and materials is frequently due to the thermodynamic and/or kinetic stability related to their molecular structure. Further these pollutants tend to be sorbed strongly to other components of the contaminated matter such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) or pentachlorophenol (PCP) to clayish soils or polychlorinated dibenzodioxins (PCDDs) or dibenzofuranes (PCDFs) to filter dusts. Adsorption renders such pollutants virtually inaccessible to physical, chemical or biological remediation and/or natural attenuation processes. These difficulties of stability and inaccessibility can be effectively overcome by mechanical activation of appropriate reductive dehalogenation reactions inside a ball mill. Such recalcitrant compounds, like PCBs, PCDDs, PCDFs or PCP, can be completely dechlorinated under strikingly benign, reductive conditions, i.e., at room temperature, ambient pressure and in a short time, by ball milling the contaminated material with a base metal and a hydrogen donor. A ball mill is utilized as a mechanochemical dehalogenation reactor in one single, almost universally applicable, operational key step. This novel, versatile ex situ dehalogenation approach can be successfully applied both to contaminated materials and highly concentrated or pure contaminants and of their mixtures, virtually regardless of their state, and is designated as {"}Dehalogenation by Mechanochemical Reaction{"} (DMCR). For instance, PCBs in contaminated soil, filter dust, transformer oil, or as pure PCBs oils from transformers or capacitors can be rapidly dechlorinated to harmless chloride and their parent hydrocarbon biphenyl by applying magnesium, aluminum or sodium metal and a low acidic hydrogen source like an ether, alcohol and/or amine. DMCR offers several economic and ecological benefits. Ball milling requires a low energy input only, toxic compounds can be converted to defined and usable products, the method facilitates the re-use of scrap metals such as magnesium or magnesium-aluminum alloys, and detoxified materials like transformer oils can be readily recycled after a DMCR treatment. No harmful emissions to the environment have to be expected. This paper presents selected results of various treatability and feasibility studies demonstrating the versatility and efficiency of DMCR regarding the defined destruction of numerous hazardous persistent organic pollutants (POPs) like PCBs, PCDD/Fs and related compounds (PCP and dichlorobenzene (DCB)) in different solid and liquid contaminated materials.",
keywords = "Ball mill, DDT, Dechlorination, Dehalogenation, Destruction, Dioxin, Disposal, Grinding, Lewisite, Lost, Magnesium, Mechanochemical, Mechanochemistry, Milling, Mustard gas, PCBs, PCDD, Pesticide, POPs, Waste, Engineering",
author = "Volker Birke and J{\"o}rg Mattik and Dietlind Runne and Helmut Benning and Dragan Zlatovic",
year = "2006",
doi = "10.1007/1-4020-3137-8_13",
language = "English",
isbn = "1402031351",
series = "NATO Security through Science Series C: Environmental Security",
publisher = "Springer Nature B.V.",
pages = "111--127",
editor = "Vladimir Kolodkin and Wolfgang Ruck",
booktitle = "Ecological Risks Associated with the Destruction of Chemical Weapons",
address = "Netherlands",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Dechlorination of recalcitrant polychlorinated contaminants using ball milling

AU - Birke, Volker

AU - Mattik, Jörg

AU - Runne, Dietlind

AU - Benning, Helmut

AU - Zlatovic, Dragan

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - The persistence of hazardous pollutants in the environment or waste streams and materials is frequently due to the thermodynamic and/or kinetic stability related to their molecular structure. Further these pollutants tend to be sorbed strongly to other components of the contaminated matter such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) or pentachlorophenol (PCP) to clayish soils or polychlorinated dibenzodioxins (PCDDs) or dibenzofuranes (PCDFs) to filter dusts. Adsorption renders such pollutants virtually inaccessible to physical, chemical or biological remediation and/or natural attenuation processes. These difficulties of stability and inaccessibility can be effectively overcome by mechanical activation of appropriate reductive dehalogenation reactions inside a ball mill. Such recalcitrant compounds, like PCBs, PCDDs, PCDFs or PCP, can be completely dechlorinated under strikingly benign, reductive conditions, i.e., at room temperature, ambient pressure and in a short time, by ball milling the contaminated material with a base metal and a hydrogen donor. A ball mill is utilized as a mechanochemical dehalogenation reactor in one single, almost universally applicable, operational key step. This novel, versatile ex situ dehalogenation approach can be successfully applied both to contaminated materials and highly concentrated or pure contaminants and of their mixtures, virtually regardless of their state, and is designated as "Dehalogenation by Mechanochemical Reaction" (DMCR). For instance, PCBs in contaminated soil, filter dust, transformer oil, or as pure PCBs oils from transformers or capacitors can be rapidly dechlorinated to harmless chloride and their parent hydrocarbon biphenyl by applying magnesium, aluminum or sodium metal and a low acidic hydrogen source like an ether, alcohol and/or amine. DMCR offers several economic and ecological benefits. Ball milling requires a low energy input only, toxic compounds can be converted to defined and usable products, the method facilitates the re-use of scrap metals such as magnesium or magnesium-aluminum alloys, and detoxified materials like transformer oils can be readily recycled after a DMCR treatment. No harmful emissions to the environment have to be expected. This paper presents selected results of various treatability and feasibility studies demonstrating the versatility and efficiency of DMCR regarding the defined destruction of numerous hazardous persistent organic pollutants (POPs) like PCBs, PCDD/Fs and related compounds (PCP and dichlorobenzene (DCB)) in different solid and liquid contaminated materials.

AB - The persistence of hazardous pollutants in the environment or waste streams and materials is frequently due to the thermodynamic and/or kinetic stability related to their molecular structure. Further these pollutants tend to be sorbed strongly to other components of the contaminated matter such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) or pentachlorophenol (PCP) to clayish soils or polychlorinated dibenzodioxins (PCDDs) or dibenzofuranes (PCDFs) to filter dusts. Adsorption renders such pollutants virtually inaccessible to physical, chemical or biological remediation and/or natural attenuation processes. These difficulties of stability and inaccessibility can be effectively overcome by mechanical activation of appropriate reductive dehalogenation reactions inside a ball mill. Such recalcitrant compounds, like PCBs, PCDDs, PCDFs or PCP, can be completely dechlorinated under strikingly benign, reductive conditions, i.e., at room temperature, ambient pressure and in a short time, by ball milling the contaminated material with a base metal and a hydrogen donor. A ball mill is utilized as a mechanochemical dehalogenation reactor in one single, almost universally applicable, operational key step. This novel, versatile ex situ dehalogenation approach can be successfully applied both to contaminated materials and highly concentrated or pure contaminants and of their mixtures, virtually regardless of their state, and is designated as "Dehalogenation by Mechanochemical Reaction" (DMCR). For instance, PCBs in contaminated soil, filter dust, transformer oil, or as pure PCBs oils from transformers or capacitors can be rapidly dechlorinated to harmless chloride and their parent hydrocarbon biphenyl by applying magnesium, aluminum or sodium metal and a low acidic hydrogen source like an ether, alcohol and/or amine. DMCR offers several economic and ecological benefits. Ball milling requires a low energy input only, toxic compounds can be converted to defined and usable products, the method facilitates the re-use of scrap metals such as magnesium or magnesium-aluminum alloys, and detoxified materials like transformer oils can be readily recycled after a DMCR treatment. No harmful emissions to the environment have to be expected. This paper presents selected results of various treatability and feasibility studies demonstrating the versatility and efficiency of DMCR regarding the defined destruction of numerous hazardous persistent organic pollutants (POPs) like PCBs, PCDD/Fs and related compounds (PCP and dichlorobenzene (DCB)) in different solid and liquid contaminated materials.

KW - Ball mill

KW - DDT

KW - Dechlorination

KW - Dehalogenation

KW - Destruction

KW - Dioxin

KW - Disposal

KW - Grinding

KW - Lewisite

KW - Lost

KW - Magnesium

KW - Mechanochemical

KW - Mechanochemistry

KW - Milling

KW - Mustard gas

KW - PCBs

KW - PCDD

KW - Pesticide

KW - POPs

KW - Waste

KW - Engineering

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33750930615&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/1-4020-3137-8_13

DO - 10.1007/1-4020-3137-8_13

M3 - Chapter

AN - SCOPUS:33750930615

SN - 1402031351

SN - 9781402031359

T3 - NATO Security through Science Series C: Environmental Security

SP - 111

EP - 127

BT - Ecological Risks Associated with the Destruction of Chemical Weapons

A2 - Kolodkin, Vladimir

A2 - Ruck, Wolfgang

PB - Springer Nature B.V.

ER -

DOI