Effect of iron salt counter ion in dose–response curves for inactivation of Fusarium solani in water through solar driven Fenton-like processes

Publication date: Available online 9 October 2015 Source:Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts A/B/C Author(s): Verónica Aurioles-López, M. Inmaculada Polo-López, Pilar Fernández-Ibáñez, Aurelio López-Malo, Erick R. Bandala The inactivation of Fusarium solani in water was assessed by solar driven Fenton-like processes using three different iron salts: ferric acetylacetonate (Fe(acac)3), ferric chloride (FeCl3) and ferrous sulfate (FeSO4). The experimental conditions tested were [Fe] ≈ 5 mg L−1, [H2O2] ≈ 10 mg L−1 and [Fe] ≈ 10 mg L−1; [H2O2] ≈ 20 mg L−1 mild and high, respectively, and pH 3.0 and 5.0, under solar radiation. The highest inactivation rates were observed at high reaction conditions for the three iron salts tested at pH 5.0 with less than 3.0 kJ L−1 of accumulate energy (Q UV ) to achieve over 99.9% of F. solani inactivation. Fe(acac)3 was the best iron salt to accomplishing F. solani inactivation. The modified Fermi equation was used to fix the experimental inactivation, data showed it was helpful for modeling the process, adequately describing dose–response curves. Inactivation process using FeSO4 at pH 3.0 was modeled fairly with r 2  = 0.98 and 0.99 (mild and high concentration, respectively). Fe(acac)3, FeCl3 and FeSO4 at high concentration (i.e. [Fe] ≈ 10 mg L−1; [H2O2] ≈ 20 mg L−1) and pH 5.0 showed the highest fitting values (r 2  = 0.99). Iron salt type showed a remar...
Source: Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts ABC - Category: Science Source Type: research
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