Transport of colloids and nanoparticles in saturated porous media
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Transport of colloids and nanoparticles in saturated porous media
Part of an Excellence Ph.D. Course Politecnico di Torino – June 27th, 2012 DITAG A talk on: Transport of colloids and nanoparticles in saturated porous media for environmental remediation Rajandrea SETHI, Tiziana TOSCO and GROUNDWATER ENGINEERING GROUP DIATI – Politecnico di Torino 1 ZVI Permeable reactive barrier 2 1 Degrades Transformation and immobilization of inorganic contaminants Degradation of organic contaminants 3 TCE degradation pathways 4 2 Use of ZVI to remediate contaminated aquifers Nanoscale iron Freyria et al. 2007 Millimetric iron 0.25 – 2 mm 15 – 100 nm 5 ZVI vs MZVI & NZVI MZVI & NZVI Source & plume treatment ZVI Plume treatment 0.25 – 2 mm Installation: High costs Difficult, depth <30m Standard practice 15 nm → 100 µm Installation: Low costs Injected, depth < 70m Under development 6 3 High specific surface area 1 kg of nanoscale iron = 2 x Stadio Olimpico (Roma) FESEM (Tecnogranda) ∼30000 m2 7 Degradation kinetics Fe0 + RCl + H+ → RH + Fe2+ + Cl Degradation kinetics: dcTCE = −kcTCE = −(k M ⋅ c Fe ) ⋅ cTCE = −(k SA ⋅ SSA ⋅ c Fe ) ⋅ cTCE dt dove k pseudocinetica del I ordine [T ], k cinetica all’unità di SA e c [LT ], k cinetica all’unità di c [L M T ], SSA superficie specifica [L M ], c concentrazione di ferro per volume di acqua [ML ], c concentrazione del contaminante. -1 Fe 3 -1 -1 SA Fe 2 -3 -1 -1 M Fe TCE 8 4 MZVI & NZVI: suspension stability MZVI NZVI (1-100 µm) relevant mass, high density gravitational sedimentation (15–100 nm) particle – particle attraction aggregation (single domain) 9 NZVI: aggregation The application is hindered by aggregation 10 5 MZVI & NZVI: suspension stability MZVI NZVI (1-100 µm) (15–100 nm) relevant mass, high density sedimentation particle – particle attraction & aggregation Reactivity: □ Lower, due to reduced surface area Injection: □ Sedimentation during pumping and inside the wells □ Reduced radius of influence Transport: 11 □ Filtered/strained in the porous medium, reduced contact with contaminants NZVI: Thermodynamic stabilization Modification of surface properties: low concentrations of polymers adsorbed on particles surface providing: Electrostatic stabilization: repulsive forces due to the surface charge of the polymer layer □ short-ranged □ affected by ionic strength Steric stabilization: repulsion due to osmotic and elastic forces □ long-ranged if MW is high □ indifferent to ionic strength IS With polimer No polimer 12 6 MZVI & NZVI: stabilization Stabilization: via addition of green polymers (guar gum and xanthan gum) 1. GREEN: natural origins from the seed of the guar plant 2. INEXPENSIVE: Sigma-Aldrich: Commercial: 3. COMMERCIALLY AVAILABLE: food industry 44.60 ~2 €/kg €/kg 13 NZVI: Thermodynamic stabilization DLS measurements (guar gum 0.5 g/l): 600 Bare particles MRNIP Guar gum-coated particles 10mM NaCl 500 500 Radius (nm) Hydrodynamic Radius (nm) 400 300 200 400 Initial Particle Size 300 200 Initial Particle Size 100 0 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 Time (s) 154 mg/l 231 mg/l Particle Concentration (mg/L) Decrease of the hydrodynamic radius Bare Particles Particles in solution of Guar Gum 0.5 g/L Reduced aggregation Tiraferri, A.; Chen, K.L.; Sethi, R.; Elimelech, M. Reduced aggregation and sedimentation of zero-valent iron nanoparticles in the presence of guar gum. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 2008, 324(1-2), 71-79. 14 7 MZVI: Kinetic stabilization Modification of fluid properties: reduced frequency of particle collisions. Shear-thinning solution of xanthan, guar gum (3-10 g/l) G ua rg High viscosity at low shear rate ↓ Reduced sedimentation & aggregation um so l ut io n Low viscosity at low shear rate ↓ Easily injected water Comba, S.; Dalmazzo, D.; Santagata, E.; Sethi, R. Rheological characterization of NZVI suspensions for injection in porous media. Journal of Hazardous Materials (submitted) 2010. 15 MZVI: Kinetic stabilization Sedimentation curves for MZVI in guar gum (5.5 g/l) proved increased stability: MZVI in guar gum MZVI in water Sedimentation curves 16 8 Column tests: experimental setup Column transport tests: Packed column: □ L = 0.46 m, din = 2.5 cm, n = 0.49 □ Q = 6.74 ·10-4 l/s Sand (Sibelco & Dorsilit): □ d50 = 0.69 mm □ Silica, K-feldspar (minor) Particles (20 g/l): □ MZVI (Basf) □ NZVI (Toda Kogyo corp.) Steps: □ Injection (particles+dispersant) □ Flushing (water) Dispersant during injection: □ Water (DI) □ Xanthan (3 g/l) in DI or 12.5 mM susceptimeter manometer OUT column IN 17 Column tests: experimental setup Column transport tests: MZVI Packed column: d = 1.1 µm □ L = 0.46 m, din = 2.5 cm, n = 0.49 c Comp.: 98.4% Fe0 -4 □ Q = 6.74 ·10 l/s 0.69% C Sand (Sibelco): 0.66% N □ d50 = 0.69 mm □ Silica, K-feldspar (minor) Particles (20 g/l): □ MZVI (Basf) NZVI □ NZVI (Toda Kogyo corp.) dc = 70 nm Steps: Comp.: 35% Fe0 □ Injection (particles+dispersant) 65% Fe3O4 □ Flushing (water) Dispersant during injection: □ Water (DI) □ Xanthan (3 g/l) in DI or 12.5 mM 18 9 Column tests: experimental setup Column transport tests: INJECTION MZVI or NZVI Packed column: + □ L = 0.46 m, din = 2.5 cm, n = 0.49 □ Q = 6.74 ·10-4 l/s water or xanthan 3 g/l Sand (Sibelco): (7 or 26 PVs) □ d50 = 0.69 mm □ Silica, K-feldspar (minor) 1 Particles (20 g/l): □ MZVI (Basf) 0.8 □ NZVI (Toda Kogyo corp.) 0.6 Steps: □ Injection (particles+dispersant) 0.4 □ Flushing (water) Dispersant during injection: 0.2 □ Water (DI) □ Xanthan (3 g/l) in DI or 12.5 mM 0 0 2000 FLUSHING water (26 or 15 PVs) 4000 6000 8000 19 Time (s) Column tests: concentration measurements Iron concentrations measured with susceptibility sensors Linear correlation between measured susceptibility and particle concentration □ Breakthrough curves □ Total concentration profiles Dalla Vecchia, E.; Luna, M.; Sethi, R. Transport in Porous Media of Highly Concentrated Iron Micro- and Nanoparticles in the Presence of Xanthan Gum. Environmental Science & Technology 2009, 43(23), 8942-8947. 20 10 Column tests: experimental results Continuous in-line measurement of iron concentration at column outlet: non destructive measurement MZVI NZVI 21 Column tests: experimental results Concentration profiles after injection (before flushing): non destructive measurement NZVI MZVI 22 11 Modeling approach: key aspects Key aspects: 1. Particle interactions with the porous matrix □ Physical filtration/straining □ Physical-chemical interactions: blocking, ripening 2. Clogging: □ Influence of particle deposits on porous medium properties □ Coupled problem 3. Viscosity of the dispersant fluid □ Shear-thinning behavior □ Darcy’s law for non-Newtonian fluids 23 Modeling approach: (1) Particleporous medium interactions Modified ADE accounts for interaction mechanisms: Straining Blocking Straining First... Ripening physical-chemical interactions Clean bed filtration/ straining Then... mechanisms ∂ ∂ ( ρb s ) ∂ ∂ ∂c + ( qm c ) − ε m D = 0 (ε mc ) + ∂t ∂x ∂x ∂x ∂t ∂ ( ρb s ) = f ( c, s ) ∂t 24 12 Modeling approach: (2) Clogging Clogging: Deposited particles reduce porosity and permeability: g g V ,ε g g V ,ε ↓ porosity ↑ surface area ε m (s ) = n − ρb s ρs A(s ) = A0 + θAc V ,ε g ↓ permeability g K (s ) = C ρb s ρc n3 A2 Tosco, T.; Sethi, R. Transport of non-Newtonian suspensions of highly concentrated micro- and nanoscale iron particles in porous media: a modeling approach. Environmental Science & Technology (submitted) 2010. 25 Modeling approach: (3) NonNewtonian viscosity Xanthan or guar gum gel (shear-thinning) → non-Newtonian fluid Cross model: µ m = f (γ&m , c, c x ) Extended Darcy’s law: qm = − K (s ) ∂p µ m (γ&m , c, c x ) ∂x Comba, S.; Dalmazzo, D.; Santagata, E.; Sethi, R. Rheological characterization of NZVI suspensions for injection in porous media. Journal of Hazardous Materials (submitted) 2010. 26 13 Modeling approach: coupled model E-MNM1D http://areeweb.polito.it/ricerca/groundwater/software/EMNM1D.ht ml Model structure: Darcy’s law Transport equations Permeability coefficient Medium porosity Fluid viscosity Implementation: Finite differences, 1D Evolution of MNM1D model for colloid transport Tosco, T.; Sethi, R. Transport of non-Newtonian suspensions of highly concentrated micro- and nanoscale iron particles in porous media: a modeling approach. Environmental Science & Technology (submitted) 2010. 27 E-MNM1D: www.polito.it/groundwater Transport equations: Darcy’s law: ∂ ∂ ∂ ∂cx ∂t (ε mcx ) + ∂x (qmcx ) − ∂x ε m D ∂x = 0 ∂ ∂(ρb s1 ) ∂(ρb s2 ) ∂ ∂ ∂c + + (qmc) − ε m D = 0 (ε mc) + ∂t ∂t ∂x ∂x ∂x ∂t ∂(ρ s ) b 1 = ε m ka,1 1+ A1s1β1 c − ρbkd ,1s1 ∂t β1 ∂(ρb s2 ) = ε k 1+ x c − ρ k s m a,2 b d ,2 2 ∂t d50 K (s ) ∂p qm = − µm (γ&m , c, c x ) ∂x ( Porosity: ρb s ρs ε m (s) = n − ) Fluid viscosity: µm (γ&m , c, cx ) = µm,∞ + γ&m = αγ µm,0 (c, cx ) − µm,∞ χm (c ) 1 + [λm (c) ⋅ γ&m ] qm K (s)ε m (s) Download: Permeability: 2 3 A0 ε (s ) K K (s ) = m 0 ρ n A + ϑA b s c 0 ρ c www.polito.it/groundwater/software 1D NM M E- Tosco, T.; Sethi, R. Transport of non-Newtonian suspensions of highly concentrated micro- and nanoscale iron particles in porous media: a modeling approach. Environmental Science & Technology 2010. 28 14 Modeling approach: information from experimental data 1 Pressure drop at column ends 0.8 0.6 clogging & viscosity 0.4 0.2 0 Outlet particle concentration 0 2000 4000 Time (s) 6000 8000 0 2000 4000 Time (s) 6000 8000 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 Concentration profiles after injection Deposition dynamics 4 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.1 0.2 0.3 x (m) 0.4 29 0.5 Modeling approach: fitting of experimental data MZVI NZVI Tosco, T.; Sethi, R. Transport of non-Newtonian suspensions of highly concentrated micro- and nanoscale iron particles in porous media: a modeling approach. Environmental Science & Technology (submitted) 2010. 30 15 Permeability changes Changes in permeability are manly due to changes in surface area: 2 3 A0 ε m (s ) K K (s ) = 0 n A + ϑA ρ b s c 0 ρ c 31 E-MNM radial and spherical geometry E-MNM (Enhanced Micro- and Nanoscale transport Model): Homogeneous permeation; Radial and spherical geometry. Accounts for variable: flow velocity viscosity attachment and detachment coefficients Unpublished data 32 16 Reagent delivery (reactive zones) Injection methods: Gravity Fracturing □ Hydraulic □ Pneumatic Jetting Pressure Pulse Technology Direct push Soil mixing 33 Direct push system Hydraulicallypowered machines Environmental sampling (soil, gas, groundwater) Grouting and reagents injection www.carsico.it 34 17 Direct push system Pumps and injection tips High pressure (69-127 bar) suitable for viscous fluids Average pumping rates Injection (Top-down or bottom-up) 35 Recirculation Sethi 36 18 Field injection of MZVI FP7 AQUAREHAB Injection 16/11/2011 Site description (Belgium): Contamination of chlorinated hydrocarbons Sandy-loam aquifer Injection depth: 8.5 – 10.5 m 5 injection points TCE TCA clayey sand 7m coarse sand 20m 37 Field injection of MZVI Fracturing injection: Direct push system (Geoprobe GS200) High pressure bottom-up injection (10-40 bar) Sospension: MZVI: D 50 = 50 µm, 50 g/l Guar gum: 6 g/l Volume: 1.6 m 3 38 19 Field injection of MZVI Installazione della rete di monitoraggio: 39 Conclusions Stability: Guar gum and xanthan (green biopolymers) provide thermodynamic and kinetic stabilization: □ MZVI: sedimentation prevention □ NZVI: aggregation and sedimentation prevention Transport in porous media: Transportability: guar gum & xanthan increase breakthrough concentration Modeling: successful modeling of particle transport with □ Extension of Darcy’s law for non-Newtonian fluids □ Changing of hydrodynamic parameters due to clogging 40 20 Projects and Acknowledgements The work was partially funded by the EU Research project (VII Framework Program) “AQUAREHAB – Development of rehabilitation technologies and approaches for multipressured degraded waters and the integration of their impact on river basin management” – project coordinator Dr. L. Bastiaens (VITO, Belgium) Acknowledgement to: DITAG, Politecnico di Torino: Alberto Tiraferri, Elena Dalla Vecchia, Michela Luna, Francesca Gastone, Xue Dingqui, Silvia Comba, Francesca Messina, Matteo Icardi DISAT, Politecnico di Torino: Daniele Marchisio, Barbara Bonelli, Federica Lince, Francesca Freyria INRIM, Torino: Marco Coisson 41 References Tosco T, Bosch J, Meckenstock RU, Sethi R. Transport of ferrihydrite nanoparticles in saturated porous media: role of ionic strength and flow rate.Environ Sci Technol. 2012 Apr 3;46(7):4008-15 Freyria F.S.; Bonelli B.; Sethi R.; Armandi M.; Belluso E.; Garrone E. (2011). Reactions of Acid Orange 7 with Iron Nanoparticles in Aqueous Solutions. In: JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY. C, NANOMATERIALS AND INTERFACES, vol. 115 n. 49, pp. 24143-24152. - ISSN 1932-7447 Tosco, T.; Tiraferri, A.; Sethi, R. Ionic Strength Dependent Transport of Microparticles in Saturated Porous Media: Modeling Mobilization and Immobilization Phenomena under Transient Chemical Conditions. Environmental Science & Technology 2009, 43(12), 4425-4431. Tosco, T.; Sethi, R. MNM1D: a numerical code for colloid transport in porous media: implementation and validation. American Journal of Environmental Sciences 2009, 5(4), 517-525. Tosco, T.; Sethi, R. Transport of non-Newtonian suspensions of highly concentrated micro- and nanoscale iron particles in porous media: a modeling approach. Environmental Science & Technology (submitted) 2010. Tiraferri, A., T. Tosco, e R. Sethi (2010), Transport and Retention of Microparticles in Packed Sand Columns at Low and Intermediate Salinities: Experiments and Mathematical Modeling. Environmental Earth Sciences (submitted) 2010. Tiraferri, A.; Chen, K.L.; Sethi, R.; Elimelech, M. Reduced aggregation and sedimentation of zero-valent iron nanoparticles in the presence of guar gum. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 2008, 324(1-2), 71-79. Tiraferri, A.; Sethi, R. Enhanced transport of zerovalent iron nanoparticles in saturated porous media by guar gum. J Nanopart Res 2009, 11(3), 635-645. Dalla Vecchia, E.; Coisson, M.; Appino, C.; Vinai, F.; Sethi, R. Magnetic Characterization and Interaction Modeling of Zerovalent Iron Nanoparticles for the Remediation of Contaminated Aquifers. Journal of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology 2009, 9(5), 3210-3218. Comba, S.; Dalmazzo, D.; Santagata, E.; Sethi, R. Rheological characterization of NZVI suspensions for injection in porous media. Journal of Hazardous Materials (submitted) 2010. Dalla Vecchia, E.; Luna, M.; Sethi, R. Transport in Porous Media of Highly Concentrated Iron Micro- and Nanoparticles in the Presence of Xanthan Gum. Environmental Science & Technology 2009, 43(23), 8942-8947. 42 21
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