An article The aqueous solubility of common organic groundwater contaminants as a function of temperature between 5 and 70 degrees C WOS:000456223500020 published article about THERMAL-ENERGY STORAGE; POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC-HYDROCARBONS; WATER; DEPENDENCE; LIQUIDS; CHLOROBENZENES; COEFFICIENTS; DISSOLUTION; MOBILITY; BENZENE in [Koproch, Nicolas; Dahmke, Andreas; Koeber, Ralf] Univ Kiel, Appl Geosci, Ludewig Meyn Str 10, D-24118 Kiel, Germany in 2019.0, Cited 42.0. Recommanded Product: 95-49-8. The Name is 1-Chloro-2-methylbenzene. Through research, I have a further understanding and discovery of 95-49-8
High-temperature thermal energy storage in shallow aquifers can potentially increase ambient groundwater temperatures up to 70 degrees C or even more. Since an increase in temperature is expected to influence contaminant mass flux into groundwater monitoring the spreading of organic contaminants located in the subsurface is crucial. In numerous former studies, the NAPL solubility, one major parameter controlling mass flux on field scale, was measured at temperatures up to 70 degrees C for a broad spectrum of organic substances. However, quantitative calculations of solubilities as a function of temperature considering a compiled database are largely missing. Aiming to examine the reliability of existing solubility-temperature relationships, to describe them functionally and further to identify knowledge gaps, previously published data on solubilities of 42 different organic groundwater contaminants were evaluated in this study. By using a common temperature regression function, the calculated solubility curves from compiled solubility data for 5-70 degrees C show relative changes between a few percent (CHCs and BTEX) and up to 2000% (PAH5). As published temperature-dependent solubilities for chlorinated ethylenes are contradictory in parts, solubilities of tetrachloroethylene, trichloroethylene, 1,2-cis-dichloroethylene and 1,2-trans-dichloroethylene were additionally investigated in more detail using batch experiments between 5 and 70 degrees C. The results show distinctive solubility minima at medium temperatures (20-40 degrees C) with concentrations decreasing from 5 degrees C to the minimum by 10-20%. The measured and calculated temperature-dependent solubilities enable a more reliable assessment of thermal energy storage at contaminated sites, of existing thermal remediation approaches and of combinations of underground heat storage with groundwater remediation. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Recommanded Product: 95-49-8. About 1-Chloro-2-methylbenzene, If you have any questions, you can contact Koproch, N; Dahmke, A; Kober, R or concate me.
Reference:
Patent; Nanjing Zhongteng Chemical Co., Ltd.; Zhong Hua; Lu Minshan; Chen Xiuzhen; Liu Qiaobao; Yin Hengbo; Wang Aili; (8 pag.)CN104876790; (2017); B;,
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