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Characterization of the Songhua River sediments and evaluation of their adsorption behavior for nitrobenzene

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TLDR
This study has focused on the adsorption behavior of nitrobenzene that spilled onto sediments along the Songhua River, which was one of the efforts to evaluate the fate of nitrosene after the spillage event.
Abstract
The explosion at a plant of the Jilin Petrochemical Corporation on 13 November, 2005, and the spill of an estimated 100 t of toxic substances (nitrobenzene as the main component) into the Songhua River received worldwide attention. This study has focused on the adsorption behavior of nitrobenzene that spilled onto sediments along the Songhua River, which was one of the efforts to evaluate the fate of nitrobenzene after the spillage event. The organic carbon contents of these sediments along the Songhua River varied from 2.1 g TOC/kg at Hulanhekouxia to 86.1 g TOC/kg at Jiuzhan. The average volumetric particle diameter also varied largely from 11 mu m at Jiangchuan to 311 mu m at Hulanhekouxia. The sediment in the Jiuzhan section showed the highest potential for nitrobenzene adsorption (8.3 mg/kg sediment), whereas, that at Hulanhekouxia exhibited the lowest adsorption capacity, of 1.6 mg/kg sediment. The nitrobenzene adsorption potential is linearly related to the organic carbon content of sediments (R(2) = 0.609), indicating that the organic carbon content is the main factor affecting the adsorption behavior of sediments along the Songhua River. Conclusively, the adsorption of nitrobenzene onto the sediments is insignificant, and the release of nitrobenzene from sediments is of minor importance.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism of heterogeneous catalytic ozonation of nitrobenzene in aqueous solution with modified ceramic honeycomb

TL;DR: In this article, the degradation efficiencies of nitrobenzene in aqueous solution were investigated by semi-continuous experiments in the processes of ozone alone, ozone/ceramic honeycomb (CH) and ozone/modified ceramic honeycomb(MCH).
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies on adsorption/desorption of nitrobenzene and humic acid onto/from activated carbon

TL;DR: In this article, the results of the studies on adsorption of nitrobenzene and humic acid from aqueous solution onto activated carbon commercial (ACC) grade were reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heavy metals in Yinma River sediment in a major Phaeozems zone, Northeast China: Distribution, chemical fraction, contamination assessment and source apportionment.

TL;DR: Results indicated that Cd, Pb, Ni, and Zn exhibited higher mobility susceptibility and bioavailability with a significant and late anthropogenic origin, and Changchun City and Shitoukoumen Reservoir as the major drinking water source may be hotspots of the heavy metal contamination in the watershed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrobenzene biodegradation ability of microbial communities in water and sediments along the Songhua River after a nitrobenzene pollution event.

TL;DR: In this article, the degradation rates of microbial communities in downstream sites were markedly higher than those in the upstream sites, indicating that NB degradation abilities were enhanced because of the pollution of NB.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transport and fate modeling of nitrobenzene in groundwater after the Songhua River pollution accident.

TL;DR: Numerical modeling results indicated a good match between computed and observed data, and in the prediction model NB entered the groundwater after the pollution accident, and results indicated that NB's biodegradation was not affected by the initial NB concentration.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement of mobility of organic compounds in soils

TL;DR: In this article, the leachability of chlorinated hydrocarbons, chlorophenols and light aromatic compounds was studied for three typical Norwegian soils, and good correlations between soil adsorption constants (Koc) and water solubility were obtained.
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Sorption of selected organic pollutants in Danish soils

TL;DR: The sorption of benzoic acid, nitrobenzene, 4-nitrophenol, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, and naphthalene was determined for 10 Danish soils in laboratory studies and adsorption was significantly correlated with the organic carbon content of the soils tested.
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