Aqueous Silica in the Environment: Effects on Iron Hydroxide Surface Chemistry and Implications for Natural and Engineered Systems

Aqueous silica is present in all natural waters and exhibits a high affinity for the surfaces of iron oxides. Therefore, it is expected to play an important role in environmental systems. Experiments were conducted to investigate the fundamentals of silica sorption onto pre-formed ferric hydroxide...

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Main Author: Davis, Christina Clarkson
Other Authors: Environmental Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33948
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07102000-22360009/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-339482020-09-29T05:39:51Z Aqueous Silica in the Environment: Effects on Iron Hydroxide Surface Chemistry and Implications for Natural and Engineered Systems Davis, Christina Clarkson Environmental Engineering Edwards, Marc A. Knocke, William R. Little, John C. Sorption Colloid Mobilization Arsenic Iron Hydroxide Silica Humic Substances Aqueous silica is present in all natural waters and exhibits a high affinity for the surfaces of iron oxides. Therefore, it is expected to play an important role in environmental systems. Experiments were conducted to investigate the fundamentals of silica sorption onto pre-formed ferric hydroxide at pH 5.0-9.5 and silica concentrations of 0-200 mg/L as SiO<sub>2</sub>. Over the entire pH range studied, sorption densities exceeding monolayer sorption were observed at silica levels typical of natural waters. Under some circumstances, sorption exceeded a monolayer while the particle zeta potential remained positive, a phenomenon which is inconsistent with available models. To address this deficiency, an extended surface complexation model was formulated in which soluble dimeric silica sorbs directly to iron surface sites. This model fits sorption density data up to 0.40 mol SiO<sub>2</sub>/mol Fe, and it accurately predicts trends in zeta potential and the observed H<sup>+</sup> release during silica sorption to ferric hydroxide at pH 5.0 and 6.0. <p> A second phase of research was aimed at identifying the practical implications of silica sorption to iron hydroxide in natural and engineered systems. Two types of surfaces were prepared by exposing pre-formed Fe(OH)<sub>3</sub> to aqueous silica (0-200 mg/L as SiO<sub>2</sub>) for periods of 1.5 hours or 50 days. The concentration of pre-formed iron passing through a 0.45 micron pore size filter at pH 6.0-9.5 increased as the solids aged in the presence of silica. Consistent with formation of small, stable colloids, "soluble" iron concentrations exceeded 0.2 mg/L only at zeta potentials <span style="text-decoration:underline"><</span> -15 mV. When arsenate was added to iron hydroxide particles equilibrated with silica for 1.5 hours, percentage arsenate removals were high. In contrast, arsenate removals decreased markedly as pH and silica concentrations increased if silica was pre-equilibrated with the iron for 50 days. Trends in percentage removal of humic substances were similar. Competition for sorption sites was the main cause of hindered anionic contaminant removal. However, interference with hydrolysis and precipitation are expected to be important under some circumstances, particularly during water treatment. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:41:15Z 2014-03-14T20:41:15Z 2000-05-09 2000-07-10 2001-07-14 2000-07-14 Thesis etd-07102000-22360009 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33948 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07102000-22360009/ davis-etd.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Sorption
Colloid Mobilization
Arsenic
Iron Hydroxide
Silica
Humic Substances
spellingShingle Sorption
Colloid Mobilization
Arsenic
Iron Hydroxide
Silica
Humic Substances
Davis, Christina Clarkson
Aqueous Silica in the Environment: Effects on Iron Hydroxide Surface Chemistry and Implications for Natural and Engineered Systems
description Aqueous silica is present in all natural waters and exhibits a high affinity for the surfaces of iron oxides. Therefore, it is expected to play an important role in environmental systems. Experiments were conducted to investigate the fundamentals of silica sorption onto pre-formed ferric hydroxide at pH 5.0-9.5 and silica concentrations of 0-200 mg/L as SiO<sub>2</sub>. Over the entire pH range studied, sorption densities exceeding monolayer sorption were observed at silica levels typical of natural waters. Under some circumstances, sorption exceeded a monolayer while the particle zeta potential remained positive, a phenomenon which is inconsistent with available models. To address this deficiency, an extended surface complexation model was formulated in which soluble dimeric silica sorbs directly to iron surface sites. This model fits sorption density data up to 0.40 mol SiO<sub>2</sub>/mol Fe, and it accurately predicts trends in zeta potential and the observed H<sup>+</sup> release during silica sorption to ferric hydroxide at pH 5.0 and 6.0. <p> A second phase of research was aimed at identifying the practical implications of silica sorption to iron hydroxide in natural and engineered systems. Two types of surfaces were prepared by exposing pre-formed Fe(OH)<sub>3</sub> to aqueous silica (0-200 mg/L as SiO<sub>2</sub>) for periods of 1.5 hours or 50 days. The concentration of pre-formed iron passing through a 0.45 micron pore size filter at pH 6.0-9.5 increased as the solids aged in the presence of silica. Consistent with formation of small, stable colloids, "soluble" iron concentrations exceeded 0.2 mg/L only at zeta potentials <span style="text-decoration:underline"><</span> -15 mV. When arsenate was added to iron hydroxide particles equilibrated with silica for 1.5 hours, percentage arsenate removals were high. In contrast, arsenate removals decreased markedly as pH and silica concentrations increased if silica was pre-equilibrated with the iron for 50 days. Trends in percentage removal of humic substances were similar. Competition for sorption sites was the main cause of hindered anionic contaminant removal. However, interference with hydrolysis and precipitation are expected to be important under some circumstances, particularly during water treatment. === Master of Science
author2 Environmental Engineering
author_facet Environmental Engineering
Davis, Christina Clarkson
author Davis, Christina Clarkson
author_sort Davis, Christina Clarkson
title Aqueous Silica in the Environment: Effects on Iron Hydroxide Surface Chemistry and Implications for Natural and Engineered Systems
title_short Aqueous Silica in the Environment: Effects on Iron Hydroxide Surface Chemistry and Implications for Natural and Engineered Systems
title_full Aqueous Silica in the Environment: Effects on Iron Hydroxide Surface Chemistry and Implications for Natural and Engineered Systems
title_fullStr Aqueous Silica in the Environment: Effects on Iron Hydroxide Surface Chemistry and Implications for Natural and Engineered Systems
title_full_unstemmed Aqueous Silica in the Environment: Effects on Iron Hydroxide Surface Chemistry and Implications for Natural and Engineered Systems
title_sort aqueous silica in the environment: effects on iron hydroxide surface chemistry and implications for natural and engineered systems
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33948
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07102000-22360009/
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