This invention relates generally to water remediation systems.
There is a well recognized need to clean-up contaminants that exist in ground and surface water. In particular, there is one type of contamination problem which widely exists, that is, the contamination of surface waters or subsurface waters which find their way to the surface such as, for example, in a contaminated spring. Such surface waters may be contaminated with various constituents including volatile hydrocarbons, such as chlorinated hydrocarbons including trichloroethene (TCE), tetrachloroethene (PCE).
According to an additional aspect of the present invention, a microporous diffuser includes a first elongated member including at least one sidewall having a plurality of microscopic openings, said sidewall defining an interior hollow portion of said member and a second elongated member having a second sidewall having a plurality of microscopic openings, said second member being disposed through the hollow region of said first member. The diffuser includes an end cap to seal a first end of the microporous diffuser and an inlet cap disposed at a second end of microporous diffuser for receiving inlet fittings.
According to an additional aspect of the present invention, a microporous diffuser includes a first hollow cylindrical tube having a sidewall comprising a plurality of microscopic openings and a second hollow tube having a sidewall having a plurality of microscopic openings, said second tube being disposed through said first tube. The diffuser also includes an end cap to seal ends of said tubes and an inlet cap disposed to provide inlets to interior portions formed by sidewalls of said tubes.
According to a still further aspect of the invention, a microporous diffuser includes a first hollow cylindrical tube coupled to a first inlet and adapted to be fed by a gas, the tube having a sidewall comprising a plurality of microscopic openings the openings having a diameter in a range of 1 to 200 microns and a second hollow tube coupled to a second inlet and adapted to be fed by a liquid, the tube having a sidewall with a plurality of microscopic openings, the openings having a diameter in a range of 1 to 200 microns, with the first tube being disposed through the second tube and arranged such that gas injected into the first tube travels towards the sidewall of the second tube forming microfine bubbles laminated with the liquid. The diffuser also includes an end cap to seal first ends of the tubes and an inlet cap disposed to seal second ends of said tubes and to support the first and second inlets to the interior portions formed between the tubes.
Referring now to
Contaminants which can be treated or removed by use of the spring box treatment system 20 include hydrocarbons and, in particular, volatile chlorinated hydrocarbons such as tetrachloroethene, trichloroethene, cisdichloroethene, transdichloroethene, 1-1-dichloroethene and vinyl chloride. In particular, other materials can also be removed from the stream including chloroalkanes, including 1,1,1 trichloroethane, 1,1, dichloroethane, methylene chloride, and chloroform; benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, O-xylene, P-xylene, naphthalene and methyltetrabutylether (MTBE). It should be understood that the use of the spring-box treatment system 20 is not limited to flowing surface water but could be used to treat pumped or stored water.
Referring now to
The spring box 30 uses primarily a gas-gas reaction between contaminant vapors and ozone (described below). This reaction can be supplemented with a liquid phase reaction. A liquid decontaminator such as hydrogen peroxide can also be used. The use of hydrogen peroxide as a thin film coating on the bubbles promotes the decomposition rate by adding a secondary liquid phase reactive interface as volatile compounds enter the gaseous phase. It also expands the types of compounds that can be effectively removed. Alternatively, the pump control 28 can simply feed water.
Referring now to
In the arrangement shown in
As shown in
The spring box 30 is an ozone reactor vessel in which ozone is pumped into the pool of water through the use of the microporous diffusers. The microporous diffusers are disposed in the water under treatment and transfer ozone into the water in the form of microfine or fine bubbles which promote rapid gas/gas/water reactions with volatile organic compounds particularly in the presence of a catalyst or enhancer which may participate in the gaseous phase of the reaction, instead of solely enhancing dissolved aqueous disassociation and reactions. In addition, with the optional use of the liquid port to the apparatus, the gas/gas reactions are optimized to include gas/gas reactions within the gaseous phase as well as inducing water aqueous phased reactions to achieve an overall decomposition rate within the gaseous phase and the aqueous phase from second water reactions. For example, the use of hydrogen peroxide as a laminate coating on the bubbles can enhance decomposition rates as mentioned below. The micron plastic bubblers may also be coated with or have sintered into construction an outer layer of activated carbon or activated carbon with palladium to simultaneously accumulate and promote decomposition of the chloroethenes.
The production of microbubbles and selection of appropriate size distribution are selected for optimized gas exchange through high surface area to volume ratio and long residence time within the liquid to be treated. The microbubbles are generated by using microporous materials in the microporous diffuser 50 that acts as a bubble chamber, as shown in the embodiment 50 (
Referring now to
A proximate end of central cylindrical member 60 is coupled to a first inlet port 52a which is provided from a first inlet cap 52 and proximate ends of the plurality of cylindrical members 58 are coupled to second inlet ports generally denoted as 52b. At the opposite end of the microporous diffuser 50 an end cap 54 covers distal ends of cylindrical members 56 and 60. Here distal ends of the plurality of cylindrical members 58 are sealed by separate caps 59 but could be terminated by the end cap 54. The end cap 54 in conjunction with cap 52 seals the distal ends of the microporous diffuser. Each of the cylindrical members 56, 58 and 60 are here cylindrical in shape and have a plurality of microscopic openings constructed through sidewalls 56a, 58a and 60a, respectively, thereof having pore sizes matched to or to create a pore size effective for inducing gas/gas reactions in the spring box 30. Sidewalls of each of the cylindrical members can have a pore diameter in a range of 1-200 microns, preferably 1-50 microns and more preferably 5-20 microns. The combination of the inlet cap 52 and end cap 54 seals the microporus diffuser 50 permitting liquid and gas to escape by the porous construction of sidewalls of the microporous diffusers.
The microporous diffuser 50 can be filled with a microporous material such as microbeads with mesh sizes from 20 to 200 mesh or sand pack or porous hydrophilic plastic to allow introducing a liquid into the pore spaces where liquid is exiting.
Referring now to
Referring now to
The fittings (i.e., the inlets in
Referring to
The use of catalysts supported by absorptive materials such as palladized activated carbon can be particularly effective for compounds that have an absorptive affinity to activated carbon. The compounds such as TCE are concentrated near the release location of the ozone micro bubbles, allowing more efficient reaction for water containing lower concentrations of TCE as explained above. The layer 93 can also be provided on the other embodiments 50, 70 above, e.g., on either or both cylindrical members but preferably on the members that deliver the ozone to the water.
Referring now to
In the arrangement shown in
As shown in
The spring box 110 is an ozone reactor vessel in which ozone is pumped into the pool of water through the use of the microporous diffusers. The microporous diffusers 116 are disposed in the water under treatment and transfer ozone into the water in the form of micro fine or fine bubbles which promote rapid gas/gas/water reactions with volatile organic compounds particularly in the presence of a catalyst or enhancer which may participate in the gaseous phase of the reaction, instead of solely enhancing dissolved aqueous disassociation and reactions.
In addition, an optional liquid port (not shown) to the rotary joint can be provided to include gas/gas reactions within the gaseous phase as well as inducing water aqueous phased reactions to achieve an overall decomposition rate within the gaseous phase and the aqueous phase from second water reactions. For example, the use of hydrogen peroxide as a laminate coating on the bubbles can enhance decomposition rates as mentioned above.
Referring now to
The treatment system 120 makes use of a gas-gas reaction of contaminant vapors and ozone (described below) that can be supplemented with a liquid phase reaction. The use of hydrogen peroxide as a thin film coating on the bubbles promotes the decomposition rate by adding a secondary liquid phase reactive interface as volatile compounds enter the gaseous phase. It also expands the types of compounds that can be effectively removed. Alternatively, the pump control 138 can simply feed water.
In particular, with the microporous diffusers 50 and 70 and use of the optional port to introduce a liquid such as hydrogen peroxide or water into the chamber, the microbubbles are produced in the microporous diffuser by bubbling air/ozone through the central cylinder of the microporous diffusers and into the surrounding outer regions of the microporous diffusers. At the same time, a liquid is introduced into the microporous diffusers 50, 70 and laminates an outer surface of bubbles formed by the gas. The liquid forms a liquid barrier between the water to be treated and the inside gas containing air/ozone. This arrangement thus can be injected into a slurry containing a catalyst such as silicate, iron silicate, palladium, palladized carbon or titanium dioxide to produce rapid reactions to decompose contaminants within the pool of water contained in the spring box 30. The reactions can proceed as set out below.
The process uses microfine bubble injection to produce simultaneous extraction/decomposition reactions as opposed to simply creating smaller and smaller sized bubbles for the purpose of injecting into free water. The process involves generation of fine bubbles which can promote rapid gas/gas/water reactions with volatile organic compounds which a substrate (catalyst or enhancer) participates in, instead of solely enhancing dissolved (aqueous) disassociation and reactions. The production of microbubbles and selection of appropriate size distribution is provided by using microporous material and a bubble chamber for optimizing gaseous exchange through high surface area to volume ratio and long residence time within the liquid to be treated. The equipment promotes the continuous production of microbubbles while minimizing coalescing or adhesion.
The injected air/liquid combination moves as a fluid into the water to be treated. The use of microencapsulated ozone enhances and promotes in-situ stripping of volatile organics and simultaneously terminates the normal reversible Henrys reaction. The process involves promoting simultaneous volatile organic compounds (VOC) in-situ stripping and gaseous decomposition, with moisture (water) and substrate (catalyst or enhancer). The reaction mechanism is not a dissolved aqueous reaction. In some cases, with cis- or trans-DCE, the aqueous phase reaction may assist the predominantly gas-phase reaction.
The remote process controller and monitor allows for the capability for sensor feedback and remote communication to the pump control 24 and ozone (or oxygen or both) generator 26 to achieve a certain level of gaseous content (e.g., dissolved oxygen, ozone, or other gas) and rate of mixing to promote efficient reactions. This is done by sensors 39 (
Appropriately sized microfine bubbles can be generated in a continuous or pulsing manner which allows alternating water/bubble/water/bubble fluid flow. The microfine bubbles substantially accelerate the transfer rate of volatile organic compounds like PCE from aqueous to gaseous state. Reducing the size of the bubbles to microfine sizes, e.g., 5 to 50 microns, can boost extraction rates. These sizes boost exchange rates and do not tend to retard rise time by too small a size. When an oxidizing gas (ozone) is added into the microbubbles, the rate of extraction is enhanced further by maintaining a low interior (intrabubble) concentration of PCE, while simultaneously degrading the PCE by a gas/gas/water reaction. The combination of both processes acting simultaneously provides a unique rapid removal system which is identified by a logarithmic rate of removal of PCE, and a characteristic ratio of efficiency quite different from dissolved (aqueous) ozone reactions. The compounds commonly treated are HVOCs (halogenated volatile organic compounds), PCE, TCE, DCE, vinyl chloride (VC), petroleum compounds (BTEX: benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylenes).
An analysis of the reaction mechanism is set out. Gaseous exchange is proportional to available surface area. With partial pressures and mixtures of volatile gases being held constant, a halving of the radius of bubbles would quadruple (i.e., times) the exchange rate. If, in the best case, a standard well screen creates air bubbles 200 times the size of a medium sand porosity, a microporous diffuser of 5 to 20 micron size creates a bubble 1/10 the diameter and six to ten times the volume/surface ratio as shown in Table 1.
Theoretically, the microporous bubbles exhibit an exchange rate of ten times the rate of a comparable bubble from a standard ten slot well screen.
In wastewater treatment, the rate of transfer between gas and liquid phases is generally proportional to the surface area of contact and the difference between the existing concentration and the equilibrium concentration of the gas in solution. Simply stated, if the surface to volume ratio of contact is increased, the rate of exchange also increases as illustrated in Table 2. If, the gas (VOC) entering the bubble (or micropore space bounded by a liquid film), is consumed, the difference is maintained at a higher entry rate than if the VOC is allowed to reach saturation equilibrium. In the case of a halogenated volatile organic carbon compound (HVOC), PCE, gas/gas reaction of PCE to by-products of HCl, CO2 and H2O accomplishes this. In the case of petroleum products like BTEX (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylenes), the benzene entering the bubbles reacts to decompose to CO2 and H2O. The normal equation for the two-film theory of gas transfer is:
rm=KgA(Cg−C)
where:
The restatement of the equation to consider the inward transfer of phase change from dissolved HVOC to gaseous HVOC in the inside of the bubble would be:
Soil vapor concentrations are related to two governing systems: water phase and (non-aqueous) product phase. Henrys and Raoults Laws are commonly used to understand equilibrium-vapor concentrations-governing volatilisation from liquids. When soils are moist, the relative volatility is dependent upon Henrys Law. Under normal conditions (free from product) where volatile organic carbons (VOCs) are relatively low, an equilibrium of soil, water, and air is assumed to exist. The compound tetrachloroethene (PCE) has a high exchange capacity from dissolved form to gaseous form. If the surface/volume ratio is modified at least ten fold, the rate of removal should be accelerated substantially.
Ozone is an effective oxidant used for the breakdown of organic compounds in water treatment. The major problem in effectiveness is that ozone has a short lifetime. If ozone is mixed with sewage containing water above ground, the half-life is normally minutes. Ozone reacts quantitatively with PCE to yield breakdown products of hydrochloric acid, carbon dioxide, and water.
To offset the short life span, the ozone is injected with microporous diffusers, enhancing the selectiveness of action of the ozone. By encapsulating the ozone in fine bubbles, the bubbles would preferentially extract volatile compounds like PCE from the mixtures of soluble organic compounds they encountered. With this process, volatile organics are selectively pulled into the fine air bubbles. Gas entering a small bubble of volume (4πr3) increases until reaching an asymptotic value of saturation. If we consider the surface of the bubble to be a membrane, a first order equation can be written for the monomolecular reaction of the first order. The reaction can be
written as follows:
If at time t=0, X=0, then:
The constant K is found to be:
By multiplying both numerator and denominator by V, the
volume of the bubble, we obtain
which is the ratio between the amount of substance entering the given volume per unit time and quantity V(Q−X) needed to reach the asymptotic value. By analyzing the concentration change within the fine bubbles sent through a porous matrix with saturated (water filled) solution interacting with the matrix (sand), and determining the rate of decomposition of the products (TCE+ozone=CO2+HCl) and (Benzene+ozone=CO2+HOH), the kinetic rates of reaction can be characterized.
The rate which the quantity k1QV of the substance flows in one unit of time from aqueous solution into the bubble is proportional to Henrys Constant. This second rate of decomposition within the bubble can be considered as k1, a second
rate of reaction (−k2X), where
and, at equilibrium, as dx/dt=0, gives
However, if the reaction to decompose is very rapid, so −k2X goes to zero, the rate of reaction would maximize k1Q, i.e., be proportional to Henrys Constant and maximize the rate of extraction since VOC saturation is not occurring within the bubbles.
The combination of microbubble extraction and ozone degradation can be generalized to predict the volatile organic compounds amenable to rapid removal. The efficiency of extraction is directly proportional to Henrys Constant. Multiplying the Henrys Constant (the partitioning of VOCs from water to gas phase) times the reactivity rate constant of ozone for a particular VOC yields the rate of decomposition expected by the microbubble process.
The concentration of HVOC expected in the bubble is a consequence of rate of invasion and rate of removal. In practice, the ozone concentration is adjusted to yield 0
rvoc=−KLavoc(C−CL)
concentration at the time of arrival at the surface.
The saturation concentration of a VOC in wastewater is a function of the partial pressure of the VOC in the atmosphere in contact with the wastewater.
The rate of decomposition of an organic compound Cg (when present at a concentration (C) by ozone can be formulated
by the equation:
where
Rate of decomposition is now adjusted to equal the total HVOC entering the bubble.
SET: (Hc·Cg)=Ko(O3) (Cg) (equation 5)
therefore surface concentration=0
This condition speeds up the rate of extraction because the VOC never reaches equilibrium or saturation in the bubble.
Table 4 gives the Henrys Constants (Hc) for a selected number of organic compounds and the second rate constants (R2) for the ozone radical rate of reaction in solely aqueous reactions where superoxide and hydroxide reactions dominate. The third column presents rates of removal process.
The rapid removal rate of this process does not follow Hoigne and Bader (1983) rate constants. However, there is a close correlation to Henrys Constant as would be expected from equation 5. The presence of the substrate (sand) and moisture is necessary to complete the reaction. The active ingredient in the sand matrix appears to be an iron silicate. The breakdown products include CO2 and dilute HCl.
Two sets of equations are involved in the reactions:
Dissolved Halogenated Compounds
Dissolved Petroleum Distillates
Exemplary compounds are normally unsaturated (double bond), halogenated compounds like PCE, TCE, DCE, Vinyl Chloride, EDB; or aromatic ring compounds like benzene derivatives (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylenes). Also, pseudo Criegee reactions with the substrate and ozone appear effective in reducing certain saturated olefins like trichloro alkanes (1,1,-TCA), carbon tetrachloride (CCl4), chloroform and chlorobenzene, for instance.
The following characteristics of the contaminants appear desirable for reaction:
Absorptive substrates like activated carbon and certain resins serve to remove disolved volatile organic carbon compounds by absorption to the surface. The active surface of particles contain sites which the compounds attach to. The surface absorption is usually mathematically modeled by use of a Langmuir or Freunlich set of equations for particular sizes of particles or total surface area if the material is presented in cylinders or successive plates.
The derivation of the Langmuir isotherm stipulated a limited number of absorption sites on the surface of the solid. The absorption of a solute on the surface necessitates the removal of a solvent molecule. An equilibrium is then reached between the absorbed fraction and the remaining concentration in solution. If a continual gas phase of microbubbles is being released from a porous surface, can remove the absorbed molecule and decompose it, the reaction would be moved along much faster than in aqueous phase without the collecting surface.
This application is a divisional application of application Ser. No. 10/910,441 filed on Aug. 2, 2004 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,984,329, which was a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/354,584 filed Jan. 30, 2003 (now U.S. Pat. No. 6,780,329), which was a divisional of application Ser. No. 10/223,166 filed on Aug. 19, 2002 (U.S. Pat. No. 6,596,161), which was a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/470,167, filed Dec. 22, 1999 (U.S. Pat. No. 6,436,285).
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4298467 | Gartner et al. | Nov 1981 | A |
4639314 | Tyer | Jan 1987 | A |
4696739 | Pedneault | Sep 1987 | A |
4966717 | Kern | Oct 1990 | A |
5116163 | Bernhardt | May 1992 | A |
5122165 | Wang et al. | Jun 1992 | A |
5160655 | Donker et al. | Nov 1992 | A |
5180503 | Gorelick et al. | Jan 1993 | A |
5221159 | Billings et al. | Jun 1993 | A |
5227184 | Hurst | Jul 1993 | A |
5246309 | Hobby | Sep 1993 | A |
5254253 | Behmann | Oct 1993 | A |
5277518 | Billings et al. | Jan 1994 | A |
5389267 | Gorelick et al. | Feb 1995 | A |
5406950 | Brandenburger et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
5425598 | Pennington | Jun 1995 | A |
5451320 | Wang et al. | Sep 1995 | A |
5472294 | Billings et al. | Dec 1995 | A |
5698092 | Chen | Dec 1997 | A |
5851407 | Bowman et al. | Dec 1998 | A |
5855775 | Kerfoot | Jan 1999 | A |
5879108 | Haddad | Mar 1999 | A |
6007274 | Suthersan | Dec 1999 | A |
6083407 | Kerfoot | Jul 2000 | A |
6139755 | Marte et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6214240 | Yasunaga et al. | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6217767 | Clark | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6283674 | Suthersan | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6284143 | Kerfoot | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6312605 | Kerfoot | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6391259 | Malkin et al. | May 2002 | B1 |
6403034 | Nelson et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6645450 | Stoltz et al. | Nov 2003 | B2 |
6773609 | Hashizume | Aug 2004 | B1 |
6827861 | Kerfoot | Dec 2004 | B2 |
6872318 | Kerfoot | Mar 2005 | B2 |
7022241 | Kerfoot | Apr 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
4-171036 | Jun 1992 | JP |
6-023378 | Jan 1994 | JP |
WO 9954258 | Oct 1999 | WO |
WO9954258 | Oct 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060175265 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10910441 | Aug 2004 | US |
Child | 11328475 | US | |
Parent | 10223166 | Aug 2002 | US |
Child | 10354584 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10354584 | Jan 2003 | US |
Child | 10910441 | US | |
Parent | 09470167 | Dec 1999 | US |
Child | 10223166 | US |