posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00authored byJoel Z. Bandstra, Rosemarie Miehr, Richard L. Johnson, Paul G. Tratnyek
The reaction kinetics and product distributions for the
reduction of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) by granular iron metal
(Fe0) were studied in batch experiments under a variety
of initial concentrations of TNT and Fe0. Although the kinetics
of TNT disappearance were found to behave in accord
with the standard theory for surface-mediated reactions,
a complex relationship was found between the initial
concentrations of TNT and Fe0 and the appearance of the
expected nitro reduction product, 2,4,6-triaminotoluene
(TAT). TNT was completely converted to TAT only when
the initial concentration of TNT was low and/or the initial
concentration of Fe0 was high. Mathematical analysis
of a range of generic reaction schemes that produce stable
end products in addition to TAT showed that (i) surface
complexation of TAT is insufficient to describe all of our data
and (ii) polymerization reactions involving TAT and/or
various reaction intermediates are the likely source of the
incomplete conversion of TNT to TAT at high initial TNT
concentration and low Fe0 concentration. The relationship
between TAT production and reaction conditions is
shown to imply that passivation due to reaction products
is more likely when the ratio of initial TNT concentration to
Fe0 concentration is high and, therefore, that passivation
rates observed at the laboratory scale are likely to be faster
than those which would be observed at the field scale.