Flax shive as a sources of activated carbon for metals remediation

Flax shive constitutes about 70% of the flax stem and has limited use. Because shive is a lignocellulosic by-product, it can potentially be pyrolyzed and activated to produce an activated carbon. The objective of this study was to create an activated carbon from flax shive by chemical activation i...

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Main Authors: Akin, D. E., Wartelle, L. H., Marshall, W. E.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: North Carolina State University 2007-02-01
Series:BioResources
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.cnr.ncsu.edu/index.php/BioRes/article/viewFile/BioRes_02_1_082_090_Marshall_WA_FlaxShive_Carbon_MetalsAds/35
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spelling doaj-6fbced463f1940a0baa5b7661d0161882020-11-24T22:59:00ZengNorth Carolina State UniversityBioResources1930-21262007-02-01218290Flax shive as a sources of activated carbon for metals remediationAkin, D. E.Wartelle, L. H.Marshall, W. E.Flax shive constitutes about 70% of the flax stem and has limited use. Because shive is a lignocellulosic by-product, it can potentially be pyrolyzed and activated to produce an activated carbon. The objective of this study was to create an activated carbon from flax shive by chemical activation in order to achieve significant binding of selected divalent cations (cadmium, calcium, copper, magnesium, nickel, zinc). Shive carbons activated by exposure to phosphoric acid and com-pressed air showed greater binding of cadmium, copper, nickel or zinc than a sulfuric acid-activated flax shive carbon reported in the literature and a commercial, wood-based carbon. Uptake of calcium from a drinking water sample by the shive carbon was similar to commercial drinking water filters that contained cation exchange resins. Magnesium removal by the shive carbon was greater than a commercial drinking water filtration carbon but less than for filters containing cation exchange resins. The results indicate that chemically activated flax shive carbon shows considerable promise as a component in industrial and residential water filtration systems for removal of divalent cations.http://ojs.cnr.ncsu.edu/index.php/BioRes/article/viewFile/BioRes_02_1_082_090_Marshall_WA_FlaxShive_Carbon_MetalsAds/35Flax shiveActivated carbonMetal ionPhosphoric acid activation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Akin, D. E.
Wartelle, L. H.
Marshall, W. E.
spellingShingle Akin, D. E.
Wartelle, L. H.
Marshall, W. E.
Flax shive as a sources of activated carbon for metals remediation
BioResources
Flax shive
Activated carbon
Metal ion
Phosphoric acid activation
author_facet Akin, D. E.
Wartelle, L. H.
Marshall, W. E.
author_sort Akin, D. E.
title Flax shive as a sources of activated carbon for metals remediation
title_short Flax shive as a sources of activated carbon for metals remediation
title_full Flax shive as a sources of activated carbon for metals remediation
title_fullStr Flax shive as a sources of activated carbon for metals remediation
title_full_unstemmed Flax shive as a sources of activated carbon for metals remediation
title_sort flax shive as a sources of activated carbon for metals remediation
publisher North Carolina State University
series BioResources
issn 1930-2126
publishDate 2007-02-01
description Flax shive constitutes about 70% of the flax stem and has limited use. Because shive is a lignocellulosic by-product, it can potentially be pyrolyzed and activated to produce an activated carbon. The objective of this study was to create an activated carbon from flax shive by chemical activation in order to achieve significant binding of selected divalent cations (cadmium, calcium, copper, magnesium, nickel, zinc). Shive carbons activated by exposure to phosphoric acid and com-pressed air showed greater binding of cadmium, copper, nickel or zinc than a sulfuric acid-activated flax shive carbon reported in the literature and a commercial, wood-based carbon. Uptake of calcium from a drinking water sample by the shive carbon was similar to commercial drinking water filters that contained cation exchange resins. Magnesium removal by the shive carbon was greater than a commercial drinking water filtration carbon but less than for filters containing cation exchange resins. The results indicate that chemically activated flax shive carbon shows considerable promise as a component in industrial and residential water filtration systems for removal of divalent cations.
topic Flax shive
Activated carbon
Metal ion
Phosphoric acid activation
url http://ojs.cnr.ncsu.edu/index.php/BioRes/article/viewFile/BioRes_02_1_082_090_Marshall_WA_FlaxShive_Carbon_MetalsAds/35
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