Artigo Revisado por pares

Dechlorination of PCBs with Supercritical Water Hydrolysis.

1999; Society of Chemical Engineers, Japan; Volume: 32; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1252/jcej.32.830

ISSN

1881-1299

Autores

Takeshi Sako, Tsutomu Sugeta, Katsuto Otake, Chiyoshi Kamizawa, Makoto Okano, Akira Negishi, Chikao TSURUMI,

Tópico(s)

Chemical Reactions and Isotopes

Resumo

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were made harmless using supercritical water hydrolysis with an alkali catalyst such as sodium hydroxide. PCBs over a wide concentration range from 2wt% in transformer oil to pure state were dechlorinated to biphenyl and, in some parts, decomposed to phenol, gases and other small molecules at 30 MPa, 653–723 K, and 20–100 min of reaction time. Furthermore no dioxins were detected in both gaseous and liquid products. Supercritical water hydrolysis has advantages as follows: (1) it dechlorinates pure PCBs rapidly and completely, (2) it realizes the selective dechlorination of dilute PCBs in transformer oil without thermal deterioration of the oil, and (3) it can reduce corrosion problems by neutralizing the product of hydrogen chloride.

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