10:45 AM - 12:15 PM
[AHW18-P19] Evaluation of the practicality of nano-bubble technology for decomposing dissolved hydrogen sulfide in Lake Ogawara
Keywords:Brackish Lake, Oxidative decomposition, Hydrogen Sulfide, Nanobubble, Oxygen, Ozone
First, as basic information, it is necessary to clarify the amount of H2S in high-salinity water. Therefore, we surveyed a vertical profile of H2S concentration in Lake Ogawara. Water samples were collected every 2 m from the surface to the bottom in the center of Lake Ogawara in Sep. and Nov. 2022, and analyzed for H2S concentration. H2S concentrations were almost 0 mgS/L in the low-salinity layer, but increased to 31–37 mg/L below the halocline layer (12–18 m in Sep, 10–18 m in Nov). Total amount of H2S in the lake water was estimated to be 3.3×103 t in Sep. and 2.8×103 t in Nov., with 83% and 89% of the total distributed in the high-salinity layer, respectively.
Second, the effectiveness of nanobubble (NB) technology for H2S decomposition was evaluated. Specifically, H2S was decomposed using ozone (O3-) NB and oxygen (O2-) NB in a laboratory-scale model experiments. Decomposition rate of H2S concentration due to O3-NB and O2-NB aeration was fitted to the first order reaction equation: y=A0×e-kt+c (A0, initial concentration; k, degradation rate; c, constant). The half-lives of H2S in the decomposition experiments using O2-NB and O3-NB were 20 and 4.0 min, respectively. Based on these results and realistic oxygen supply in the field, it was considered that O3-NB can remove H2S from the high-salinity layer at a practical rate.