USF St. Petersburg campus Faculty Publications
PBDE degradation with zero-valent bimetallic systems.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2009
ISBN
9780841269927
Abstract
Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are a group of widely used brominated flame retardants. Due to their extensive use, increasing levels of PBDEs have been found in humans, fish, birds, marine mammals, sediments, house dust, air, and supermarket foods. As a new environmental pollutant, a feasible in-situ remediation method is needed. In situ remediation methods for PCBs have been developed at UCF using palladium/magnesium bimetal created by mechanical alloying. The lessons learned from the PCB work have been applied to PBDEs in this chapter. Several bimetallic systems were examined to determine the rate of debromination of 2,2',4,4'- tetrabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-047). In addition, kinetic studies on BDE-047 were conducted with 99% degradation in five hours with 0.8% Mg/Pd. During the first 30 minutes, 80% of the BDE-047 is degraded with diphenyl ether detected as one of the byproducts.
Language
en_US
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Recommended Citation
Carvalho-Knighton, K., Talalaj, L., & DeVor, R. (2009). PBDE degradation with zero-valent bimetallic systems. In C.L. Geiger & K.M. Carvalho-Knighton (Eds.), Environmental Applications of Nanoscale and Microscale Reactive Metal Particles, (pp. 75-87). Washington DC: American Chemical Society. doi: 10.1021/bk-2009-1027.ch005
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.
Comments
ACS Symposium Series, Vol. 1027