7 resultados para ORGANIC CHLORINE COMPOUNDS
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
Volatile organic compounds are a common source of groundwater contamination that can be easily removed by air stripping in columns with random packing and using a counter-current flow between the phases. This work proposes a new methodology for the column design for any particular type of packing and contaminant avoiding the necessity of a pre-defined diameter used in the classical approach. It also renders unnecessary the employment of the graphical Eckert generalized correlation for pressure drop estimates. The hydraulic features are previously chosen as a project criterion and only afterwards the mass transfer phenomena are incorporated, in opposition to conventional approach. The design procedure was translated into a convenient algorithm using C++ as programming language. A column was built in order to test the models used either in the design or in the simulation of the column performance. The experiments were fulfilled using a solution of chloroform in distilled water. Another model was built to simulate the operational performance of the column, both in steady state and in transient conditions. It consists in a system of two partial non linear differential equations (distributed parameters). Nevertheless, when flows are steady, the system became linear, although there is not an evident solution in analytical terms. In steady state the resulting system of ODE can be solved, allowing for the calculation of the concentration profile in both phases inside the column. In transient state the system of PDE was numerically solved by finite differences, after a previous linearization.
Resumo:
STRIPPING is a software application developed for the automatic design of a randomly packing column where the transfer of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from water to air can be performed and to simulate it’s behaviour in a steady-state. This software completely purges any need of experimental work for the selection of diameter of the column, and allows a choice, a priori, of the most convenient hydraulic regime for this type of operation. It also allows the operator to choose the model used for the calculation of some parameters, namely between the Eckert/Robbins model and the Billet model for estimating the pressure drop of the gaseous phase, and between the Billet and Onda/Djebbar’s models for the mass transfer. Illustrations of the graphical interface offered are presented.
Resumo:
Volatile organic compounds are a common source of groundwater contamination that can be easily removed by air stripping in columns with random packing and using a counter-current flow between the phases. This work proposes a new methodology for column design for any type of packing and contaminant which avoids the necessity of an arbitrary chosen diameter. It also avoids the employment of the usual graphical Eckert correlations for pressure drop. The hydraulic features are previously chosen as a project criterion. The design procedure was translated into a convenient algorithm in C++ language. A column was built in order to test the design, the theoretical steady-state and dynamic behaviour. The experiments were conducted using a solution of chloroform in distilled water. The results allowed for a correction in the theoretical global mass transfer coefficient previously estimated by the Onda correlations, which depend on several parameters that are not easy to control in experiments. For best describe the column behaviour in stationary and dynamic conditions, an original mathematical model was developed. It consists in a system of two partial non linear differential equations (distributed parameters). Nevertheless, when flows are steady, the system became linear, although there is not an evident solution in analytical terms. In steady state the resulting ODE can be solved by analytical methods, and in dynamic state the discretization of the PDE by finite differences allows for the overcoming of this difficulty. To estimate the contaminant concentrations in both phases in the column, a numerical algorithm was used. The high number of resulting algebraic equations and the impossibility of generating a recursive procedure did not allow the construction of a generalized programme. But an iterative procedure developed in an electronic worksheet allowed for the simulation. The solution is stable only for similar discretizations values. If different values for time/space discretization parameters are used, the solution easily becomes unstable. The system dynamic behaviour was simulated for the common liquid phase perturbations: step, impulse, rectangular pulse and sinusoidal. The final results do not configure strange or non-predictable behaviours.
Resumo:
The effect of organic and conventional agricultural systems on the physicochemical parameters, bioactive compounds content, and sensorial attributes of tomatoes (‘‘Redondo’’ cultivar) was studied. The influence on phytochemicals distribution among peel, pulp and seeds was also accessed. Organic tomatoes were richer in lycopene (+20%), vitamin C (+30%), total phenolics (+24%) and flavonoids (+21%) and had higher (+6%) in vitro antioxidant activity. In the conventional fruits, lycopene was mainly concentrated in the pulp, whereas in the organic ones, the peel and seeds contained high levels of bioactive compounds. Only the phenolic compounds had a similar distribution among the different fractions of both types of tomatoes. Furthermore, a sensorial analysis indicated that organic farming improved the gustative properties of this tomato cultivar.
Resumo:
Monitoring organic environmental contaminants is of crucial importance to ensure public health. This requires simple, portable and robust devices to carry out on-site analysis. For this purpose, a low-temperature co-fired ceramics (LTCC) microfluidic potentiometric device (LTCC/μPOT) was developed for the first time for an organic compound: sulfamethoxazole (SMX). Sensory materials relied on newly designed plastic antibodies. Sol–gel, self-assembling monolayer and molecular-imprinting techniques were merged for this purpose. Silica beads were amine-modified and linked to SMX via glutaraldehyde modification. Condensation polymerization was conducted around SMX to fill the vacant spaces. SMX was removed after, leaving behind imprinted sites of complementary shape. The obtained particles were used as ionophores in plasticized PVC membranes. The most suitable membrane composition was selected in steady-state assays. Its suitability to flow analysis was verified in flow-injection studies with regular tubular electrodes. The LTCC/μPOT device integrated a bidimensional mixer, an embedded reference electrode based on Ag/AgCl and an Ag-based contact screen-printed under a micromachined cavity of 600 μm depth. The sensing membranes were deposited over this contact and acted as indicating electrodes. Under optimum conditions, the SMX sensor displayed slopes of about −58.7 mV/decade in a range from 12.7 to 250 μg/mL, providing a detection limit of 3.85 μg/mL and a sampling throughput of 36 samples/h with a reagent consumption of 3.3 mL per sample. The system was adjusted later to multiple analyte detection by including a second potentiometric cell on the LTCC/μPOT device. No additional reference electrode was required. This concept was applied to Trimethoprim (TMP), always administered concomitantly with sulphonamide drugs, and tested in fish-farming waters. The biparametric microanalyzer displayed Nernstian behaviour, with average slopes −54.7 (SMX) and +57.8 (TMP) mV/decade. To demonstrate the microanalyzer capabilities for real applications, it was successfully applied to single and simultaneous determination of SMX and TMP in aquaculture waters.
Resumo:
In life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) models, the sorption of the ionic fraction of dissociating organic chemicals is not adequately modeled because conventional non-polar partitioning models are applied. Therefore, high uncertainties are expected when modeling the mobility, as well as the bioavailability for uptake by exposed biota and degradation, of dissociating organic chemicals. Alternative regressions that account for the ionized fraction of a molecule to estimate fate parameters were applied to the USEtox model. The most sensitive model parameters in the estimation of ecotoxicological characterization factors (CFs) of micropollutants were evaluated by Monte Carlo analysis in both the default USEtox model and the alternative approach. Negligible differences of CFs values and 95% confidence limits between the two approaches were estimated for direct emissions to the freshwater compartment; however the default USEtox model overestimates CFs and the 95% confidence limits of basic compounds up to three orders and four orders of magnitude, respectively, relatively to the alternative approach for emissions to the agricultural soil compartment. For three emission scenarios, LCIA results show that the default USEtox model overestimates freshwater ecotoxicity impacts for the emission scenarios to agricultural soil by one order of magnitude, and larger confidence limits were estimated, relatively to the alternative approach.
Resumo:
Este trabalho teve como objectivo inicial o estudo de processos oxidativos avançados de forma a remediar e tratar águas contaminadas por pesticidas. No entanto, ao longo do trabalho experimental, constatou-se que os produtos resultantes da degradação de pesticidas são muitas vezes mais tóxicos do que os compostos que lhes deram origem e que, por isso, degradar um composto nem sempre é o melhor para o ambiente. Assim, neste trabalho, procurou-se estudar o processo de degradação com o objectivo de minimizar o impacto ambiental dos pesticidas na água e no ambiente em geral. A parte experimental deste trabalho foi dividida em duas etapas, sendo que, em ambas, a voltametria de onda quadrada e a espectrofotometria de UV/Vis foram os métodos de análise utilizados, para acompanhar o processo de fotodegradação. Na primeira etapa estudou-se a relação entre a estrutura química dos pesticidas MCPA, MCPP, 2.4-D e Dicloroprop e a sua fotodegradação. Soluções aquosas dos pesticidas enunciados foram submetidas a irradiação UV/vis, com incrementos variáveis de tempo de irradiação. Os resultados obtidos, nesta etapa, permitiram constatar diferenças na percentagem de degradação dos diferentes pesticidas. Dos pesticidas estudados verificou-se uma maior fotodegradação para o MCPA e MCPP seguido do Dicloroprop e finalmente o 2.4-D que se degradou menos. Os dados obtidos sugerem que a fotodegradação destes pesticidas está intimamente ligada com a estrutura das moléculas. A presença de um maior número de grupos cloro ligados ao anel aromático nos pesticidas 2,4-D e Dicloroprop faz com que estes sejam mais estáveis e por isso se degradam menos que o MCPA e o MCPP. Por outro lado, o facto de o 2,4-D apresentar um potencial de oxidação mais elevado do que o Dicloroprop, faz com que este seja mais difícil de degradar, o que justifica a diferença entre os dois. Desta forma, foi possível concluir que a estrutura dos pesticidas condiciona o processo de degradação, como esperado. Na segunda etapa, estudou-se a estabilização dos pesticidas MCPA e MCPP após encapsulação, com 2-hidroxipropil-β-ciclodextrina (HP-β-CD), em água desionizada e em água do rio. Para tal, submeteram-se as soluções aquosas dos pesticidas com e sem ciclodextrina, a irradiação UV/vis, também com incrementos variáveis de tempo. No caso do MCPA verificou-se que, tanto para água desionizada como para água do rio, que este herbicida encapsulado se degrada bastante menos do que o MCPA livre. O encapsulamento permitiu reduzir quase para metade a taxa de fotodegradação. Assim, confirmou-se que a HP-β-CD permite estabilizar este pesticida, tornando-o mais resistente à fotodegradação. Desta forma, originam-se menos produtos de degradação, os quais podem ser mais tóxicos, e reduz-se de o impacto ambiental deste herbicida. Verificou-se também que o MCPA livre se degrada mais em água do rio do que em água desionizada, provavelmente devido à matéria orgânica presente nesta água, que promove o processo de degradação. No que respeita ao MCPP também se constatou que este herbicida se degrada menos encapsulado do que livre, em água desionizada e em água do rio. Neste caso, conseguiu-se reduzir pouco a taxa de fotodegradação, mas, ainda assim se verifica uma estabilização deste pesticida através do encapsulamento. No entanto, tornou-se mais evidente a estabilização do MCPP após encapsulação em água do rio, já que apresenta uma taxa de fotodegradação menor. Este facto demonstra que a HP-β-CD permite estabilizar também este pesticida, tornando-o mais resistente à fotodegradação, e reduzindo seu impacto ambiental.