Impact of low temperature on ex situ nitritation/in situ denitritation in field pilot-scale landfill for postclosure care of leachate treatment and gas content

2021 ◽  
Vol 131 ◽  
pp. 61-71
Author(s):  
Nuan Yang ◽  
Yong Tao ◽  
Xiaomei Wang ◽  
Guoqiang Zhan ◽  
Xiaohong He ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 4591
Author(s):  
Shuanglei Huang ◽  
Daishe Wu

The tremendous input of ammonium and rare earth element (REE) ions released by the enormous consumption of (NH4)2SO4 in in situ leaching for ion-adsorption RE mining caused serious ground and surface water contamination. Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) was a sustainable in situ technology that can reduce this nitrogen pollution. In this research, in situ, semi in situ, and ex situ method of inoculation that included low-concentration (0.02 mg·L−1) and high-concentration (0.10 mg·L−1) lanthanum (La)(III) were adopted to explore effective start-up strategies for starting up anammox reactors seeded with activated sludge and anammox sludge. The reactors were refrigerated for 30 days at 4 °C to investigate the effects of La(III) during a period of low-temperature. The results showed that the in situ and semi in situ enrichment strategies with the addition of La(III) at a low-concentration La(III) addition (0.02 mg·L−1) reduced the length of time required to reactivate the sludge until it reached a state of stable anammox activity and high nitrogen removal efficiency by 60–71 days. The addition of La(III) promoted the formation of sludge floc with a compact structure that enabled it to resist the adverse effects of low temperature and so to maintain a high abundance of AnAOB and microbacterial community diversity of sludge during refrigeration period. The addition of La(III) at a high concentration caused the cellular percentage of AnAOB to decrease from 54.60 ± 6.19% to 17.35 ± 6.69% during the enrichment and reduced nitrogen removal efficiency to an unrecoverable level to post-refrigeration.


2013 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 273
Author(s):  
Quentin Morgan ◽  
John Pope ◽  
Peter Ramsay

A new core-less testing capability has been developed to provide concurrent measurements of coal seam flow capacity and gas content at in-situ conditions. The fluid-based measurement principles are intended to overcome time constraints, accuracy limitations, and cost implications of discrete measurements attributed to traditional ex-situ measurements on core samples. Details of measurement principles, associated enabling technologies, and generic test procedures have been disclosed in a previous publication. In 2012 a number of field trials were conducted with this new service for both coal mine operators and CSG operators. This peer-reviewed paper will detail pre-job planning, well site execution, and data analysis for one of these trials, which involved testing several seams across two wells, and will illustrate comparison with data acquired using conventional testing techniques from offset wells. This peer-reviewed paper will also highlight key learnings and overall performance, and explain how the learned lessons can be applied to improve testing efficacy and data quality.


1998 ◽  
Vol 65-66 ◽  
pp. 237-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matty Caymax ◽  
S. Decoutere ◽  
Erika Röhr ◽  
W. Vandervorst ◽  
Marc M. Heyns ◽  
...  

1990 ◽  
Vol 202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Euijoon Yoon ◽  
Rafael Reif

ABSTRACTWe report the significant improvement of GaAs crystal quality on Si grown by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) with an in situ low temperature hydrogen/arsine plasma cleaning of the Si substrate at 450°C and a consequent controlled two-dimensional-like morphology of the low temperature buffer layer at its early stage. The most critical step that determines the interfacial cleanliness and the early stages of the nucleation and thin film formation of heteroepitaxial GaAs on Si in a non-ultrahigh vacuum MOCVD system is the substitution of hydrogen atoms passivating the Si surface after ex situ HF-dip with pas-sivating As atoms. Reduction of in situ cleaning temperature ensures the very slow kinetics of thermal desorption of the hydrogen atoms and re-oxidation of exposed Si surface from the reactor environment, and provides a fully As-passivated Si surface, leading to a 2D-like buffer layer.


1992 ◽  
Vol 259 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Banerjee ◽  
A. Tasch ◽  
T. Hsu ◽  
R. Qian ◽  
D. Kinosky ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTRemote Plasma-enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (RPCVD), which involves nonthermal, remote plasma excitation of precursors, has been demonstrated to be a novel and attractive technique for low temperature (150-450C) Si and Sil-xGex epitaxy for applications in Si ULSI and novel Si heterostructure devices which require compact doping profiles and/or heterointerfaces. An in situ low temperature remote hydrogen plasma clean in the Ultra-High Vacuum (UHV) deposition chamber in order to achieve a chemically passive, hydrogenated Si surface with minimal O, C and N contamination, is a critical component of the process. The ex situ wet chemical cleaning consists of ultrasonic degreasing and a modified RCA clean, followed by a final dilute HF dip. The in situ clean is achieved by remote plasma excited H, where H introduced through the plasma column is r-f excited such that the plasma glow does not engulf the wafer. In situ AES analysis shows that the remote H plasma clean results in very substantial reduction of the C, O and N contamination on the Si surface. We believe that the H plasma produces atomic H which, in turn, produces a reducing environment and has a slight etching effect on Si and SiO2 by converting them to volatile byproducts. TEM analysis of the wafers subjected to this clean indicate that defect-free surfaces with dislocation loop densities below TEM detection limits of 105 /cm2 are achievable. Corroborating evidence of achieving an atomically clean, smooth Si surface by remote H plasma clean as obtained from in situ RHEED analysis will also be presented. After in situ H cleaning at low pressures (45 mTorr), typically for 30 min. at a substrate temperature of 310 C, we observe both stronger integral order streaks compared to the as-loaded sample and the appearance of less intense half-order lines indicative of a (2 × 1) reconstruction pattern, indicating a monohydride termination. A (3 × 1) reconstruction pattern is observed upon H plasma clean at lower temperatures (250 C), which can be attributed to an alternating monohydride and dihydride termination. Results of air exposure of hydrogenated Si surfaces by AES analysis indicate that the (3 × l) termination is chemically more inert towards readsorption of C and 0. Successful Si homoepitaxy and Si/Sil-xGex heteroepitaxy under a variety of surface cleaning conditions prove that by a combination of these cleaning techniques, and by exploiting the inertness of the H-passivated Si surface, very low defect density films with 0 and C levels as low as 1X1018 cm−3 and 5×1017 cm−3, respectively, can be achieved.


Chemosphere ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 77-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faqian Sun ◽  
Bin Sun ◽  
Qian Li ◽  
Xiaoya Deng ◽  
Jian Hu ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (13) ◽  
pp. 3733
Author(s):  
Jongwan Jung ◽  
Baegmo Son ◽  
Byungmin Kam ◽  
Yong Sang Joh ◽  
Woonyoung Jeong ◽  
...  

The key process steps for growing high-quality Si-based epitaxial films via reduced pressure chemical vapor deposition (RPCVD) are investigated herein. The quality of the epitaxial films is largely affected by the following steps in the epitaxy process: ex-situ cleaning, in-situ bake, and loading conditions such as the temperature and gaseous environment. With respect to ex-situ cleaning, dry cleaning is found to be more effective than wet cleaning in 1:200 dilute hydrofluoric acid (DHF), while wet cleaning in 1:30 DHF is the least effective. However, the best results of all are obtained via a combination of wet and dry cleaning. With respect to in-situ hydrogen bake in the presence of H2 gas, the level of impurities is gradually decreased as the temperature increases from 700 °C to a maximum of 850 °C, at which no peaks of O and F are observed. Further, the addition of a hydrogen chloride (HCl) bake step after the H2 bake results in effective in-situ bake even at temperatures as low as 700 °C. In addition, the effects of temperature and environment (vacuum or gas) at the time of loading the wafers into the process chamber are compared. Better quality epitaxial films are obtained when the samples are loaded into the process chamber at low temperature in a gaseous environment. These results indicate that the epitaxial conditions must be carefully tuned and controlled in order to achieve high-quality epitaxial growth.


2000 ◽  
Vol 639 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra Ruffenach-Clur ◽  
Matthieu Moret ◽  
Olivier Briot ◽  
Nathanaël Moreaud ◽  
Joseph Calas ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTAlthough a tremendous amount of work has been done these last years on the nitride semiconductor system, a lot is still to be understood regarding the growth mechanisms of GaN. The standard GaN MOCVD growth process includes the low temperature deposition of a nucleation layer, followed by an anneal at high temperature, and the GaN layer is then deposited. The number of process parameters which can be used to tune the growth is very large (temperatures, times, thicknesses, molar flow rates and ratios …) and, due to the coupling between them, the role of each one is not clearly understood. In this paper, we present systematic series of growth experiments, where in-situ reflectance monitoring was used and correlated to ex-situ optical characterization of the samples by photoluminescence at low temperature (2K). Here, we demonstrate that the nucleation layer and its annealing have a determining effect. The nucleation layer growth temperature was not found to be a very sensitive parameter, while the amount of re-crystallization is. Surprisingly, the amount of ammonia present in the gas phase has a determining effect on the recrystallization behavior of the nucleation layer. Another interesting point is the sensitivity versus growth temperature for the main GaN layer, which was found to affect the initial stages of the growth in a drastic manner when changed by only 5°C. In-situ reflectance allowed us to tune precisely our process and to obtain GaN layers with 500 cm2/Vs electron mobility at room temperature and photoluminescence fwhm of 1.7 meV at 2K for the donor-bound exciton.


1994 ◽  
Vol 337 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. J. Pearton ◽  
C. R. Abernathy ◽  
F. Ren ◽  
J. R. Lothian ◽  
R. F. Kopf ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTDry etching of common masking materials used in GaAs device technology was examined down to temperatures of −30°C. The etch rates of SiNx, SiO2 and W in SF6/Ar are reduced below 0°C, but the anisotropy of the etching is improved at low temperature. Microwave enhancement of the SF6/Ar discharges produces increases in etch rates of several times at 25°C, but much lower increases at −30°C substrate temperature. The underlying GaAs surface shows increased S and F coverage after low temperature etching, but these species are readily removed either by an ex-situ wet chemical cleaning step or an in-situ H2 plasma exposure. Photoresist etching is less sensitive to temperature and anisotropic profiles are produced between −30 and + 60°C in pure 02 discharges.


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