Litcius/Paper detail

Remediation processes of hexavalent chromium from groundwater: a short review

Sukanya Acharyya, Anirban Das, T. P. Thaker

2023AQUA - Water Infrastructure Ecosystems and Society21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Understanding the sources and controlling processes of various groundwater contaminants and their removal methods is extremely important, as groundwater contamination is intricately linked to human health. Chromium (Cr) is a common groundwater contaminant with both natural and anthropogenic origins. Dissolved Cr exists in hexavalent and trivalent forms – while the former is carcinogenic and more soluble – the latter is a micronutrient at low levels and is less soluble. Therefore, most chromium removal methods rely on reducing the hexavalent chromium to its trivalent state to decrease the Cr-toxicity. In recent years, several experimental methods have been attempted for hexavalent chromium removal from aqueous media/groundwater. This paper reviews the recent findings on Cr removal by important, effective, and widely used methods such as adsorption by nanoscale zero-valent Fe-based and conventional materials, electrocoagulation (EC), and bioremediation. The reaction pathways, mechanisms, and effectiveness of each method are also highlighted. The role of parameters such as solution pH and temperature, initial Cr(VI) concentration, contact time with the reducing agent, adsorbent dose, and the presence of competing ions on Cr removal was evaluated. Many of the methods exhibit high (>90%) Cr removal efficiency; the main challenge would be to apply these methods for large-scale water treatment.

Topics & Concepts

Hexavalent chromiumEnvironmental remediationGroundwaterChromiumEnvironmental chemistryContaminationBioremediationChemistryZerovalent ironAdsorptionEnvironmental scienceGeologyEcologyBiologyGeotechnical engineeringOrganic chemistryEnvironmental remediation with nanomaterialsChromium effects and bioremediationAdsorption and biosorption for pollutant removal