Study of the adsorption of mercury (II) on lignocellulosic materials under static and dynamic conditions


Abstract:

WHO has declared mercury as one of the most dangerous pollutants for human health. Unfortunately, several cases of rivers and aquifers contaminated by mercury inevitably poses the problem on how to remediate them. Considerable efforts are being addressed to develop cost-effective methodologies, among which the use of low-cost adsorbing materials. In this paper, the adsorption performances of an alternative lignocellulosic material derived from the Spanish broom plant, are presented. This plant is widely diffused in the world and its usage for Hg(II) removal from water in real working conditions requires only minimal pretreatment steps. A thoroughly investigation on the kinetics and thermodynamics of Hg(II) adsorption on Spanish broom is presented, by using Hg(II) polluted aqueous solutions specifically prepared in order to simulate typical groundwater conditions. Several batch experiments, under static conditions, were carried out in order to evaluate the effect of pH, contact time, adsorbent dosage, initial concentration, temperature. A maximum adsorption capacity of 20 mg L−1 can be obtained at pH 5, following a pseudo second order kinetics. Moreover, adsorption experiments in dynamic conditions were carried out using Spanish broom filters. Interestingly, a systematic, unconventional double S-shape breakthrough curve was observed under different experimental conditions, revealing the occurrence of two adsorption processes with different time scales. This behavior has been fitted by a bimodal Thomas model which, unlike the single Thomas fitting, gives satisfactory results with the introduction of a new parameter related to the fraction of surface active sites involved in the adsorption processes.

Año de publicación:

2017

Keywords:

  • Mercury speciation
  • Mercury pollution
  • Spanish broom lignocellulosic sorbent
  • Water remediation
  • Adsorption
  • Double Thomas model

Fuente:

scopusscopus
googlegoogle

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso restringido

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Química ambiental
  • Química ambiental
  • Ciencia ambiental

Áreas temáticas:

  • Tecnología de otros productos orgánicos
  • Química analítica
  • Química inorgánica