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AuthorUsman, Muhammad
AuthorJellali, Salah
AuthorAnastopoulos, Ioannis
AuthorCharabi, Yassine
AuthorHameed, Bassim H.
AuthorHanna, Khalil
Available date2022-03-23T06:05:24Z
Publication Date2022
Publication NameJournal of Hazardous Materials
ResourceScopus
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.127670
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/28501
AbstractFenton-based treatments have received tremendous attention in recent decades as viable strategies for soil decontamination. Historically contaminated soils are characterized by particular contamination types, pollution composition patterns, soil constituents, and complex soil-pollutant interactions arising due to long-term pollutant aging. These major pitfalls dictate the remediation efficiency in a significantly different way in soils with a history of contamination than that in a spiked soil. It becomes, therefore, highly challenging to treat historically contaminated soils. Despite the immense amount of collected research data in these soils, to our knowledge, no comprehensive review of this topic has been published. This article is intended to provide a critical review of the applications, limitations, and implications of various Fenton-based processes exclusively in these soils. These processes are differentiated on the basis of experimental conditions, reaction chemistry, efficiency, and impacts on soil biota. These processes are critically evaluated to illustrate the promising techniques with a brief description of related challenges and their potential solutions. Moreover, coupling Fenton oxidation with other remediation techniques such as bioremediation, chemical reduction, and soil washing has also been discussed. The last part of this review describes the effects of these processes onto soil quality and native biota, and how they can be addressed. It is also highly demanding to identify the processes which are not likely to evolve in practice either due to their poor efficiency, treatment cost, or environmental impacts. Future critical research directions have been identified to promote research for the upscaling of this technique for real field application.
SponsorThis publication was jointly supported by Qatar University, Qatar and Sultan Qaboos University, Oman , under the international research collaboration grant ( IRCC-2021-014 ; CL/SQU-QU/CESR/21/01 ). The findings achieved herein are solely the responsibility of the authors.
Languageen
PublisherElsevier B.V.
SubjectAdvanced oxidation processes
Fenton oxidation
Persistent organic pollutants
Soil contamination
Soil remediation
TitleFenton oxidation for soil remediation: A critical review of observations in historically contaminated soils
TypeArticle Review
Volume Number424


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