Remediation Problem 4.1
Given: PCE --> TCE --> DCE isomers
Find: What is not a significant pathway for degradation of perchloroethene in a soil-groundwater system?
ANS Choices:
(A) biological oxidation
(B) chemical reduction
© deamination
(D) hydrolysis
Solution:
i know the correct answer is C, given PCE does not possess NH_2 (amine functional group); however...
from studying LeGrega (Chap 4 - Fate...):
wouldn't a better answer choice be biological reduction, not bio. oxidation (anaerobic dechlorination is the pathway LeGrega discusses on pg. 206)? while most organic substances degrade under biological oxidation, anaerobic mode is reported by LeGrega to be FAR more efficient than aerobic
also - anyone know explain why deamination is even an answer choice?-am i correct to consider it to be way out of place?
Thanks,
-Eric
Given: PCE --> TCE --> DCE isomers
Find: What is not a significant pathway for degradation of perchloroethene in a soil-groundwater system?
ANS Choices:
(A) biological oxidation
(B) chemical reduction
© deamination
(D) hydrolysis
Solution:
i know the correct answer is C, given PCE does not possess NH_2 (amine functional group); however...
from studying LeGrega (Chap 4 - Fate...):
wouldn't a better answer choice be biological reduction, not bio. oxidation (anaerobic dechlorination is the pathway LeGrega discusses on pg. 206)? while most organic substances degrade under biological oxidation, anaerobic mode is reported by LeGrega to be FAR more efficient than aerobic
also - anyone know explain why deamination is even an answer choice?-am i correct to consider it to be way out of place?
Thanks,
-Eric