Artigo Revisado por pares

Supercritical Water Oxidation of a Model Municipal Solid Waste

2000; American Chemical Society; Volume: 39; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/ie0001117

ISSN

1520-5045

Autores

Takehiro Mizuno, Motonobu Goto, Akio Kodama, Tsutomu Hirose,

Tópico(s)

Electrocatalysts for Energy Conversion

Resumo

Supercritical water oxidation has been focused on as an environmentally attractive technology by which organic materials can be oxidized to carbon dioxide, water, and nitrogen gas. We applied supercritical water oxidation to the treatment of dog food as a model municipal solid waste. The reaction was carried out in a batch reactor with hydrogen peroxide as the oxidant over the temperature range of 673−823 K. The liquid reaction products were analyzed to determine the total organic carbon (TOC), organic acid, and ammonium ion contents. When the oxidant was stoichiometrically insufficient, TOC decreased with an increasing temperature and amount of oxidant. Acetic acid and ammonium ion were detected as major refractory intermediates. Ammonium ion was completely decomposed more easily than in sewage sludge, presumably because hydrochloric acid produced Cr ion by corrosion of the wall of the reactor. The activation energy was 97.2 kJ/mol for the reduction of TOC and 130.8 kJ/mol for the reduction of ammonium ion, when analyzed by first-order kinetics.

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