Adsorption, desorption, and stabilization of arsenic on aluminum substituted ferrihydrite

Because of As toxicity, the complexity of its chemistry, and the recent lowering of the maximum contaminant level of As in municipal drinking water, there has been considerable interest for improved methods to remove As from water. Although Al and Fe hydroxides have been extensively studied as adso...

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Main Author: Masue, Yoko
Other Authors: Loeppert, R. H.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3343
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-33432013-01-08T10:38:10ZAdsorption, desorption, and stabilization of arsenic on aluminum substituted ferrihydriteMasue, YokoArsenicFe hydroxideAl hydroxideadsorptionBecause of As toxicity, the complexity of its chemistry, and the recent lowering of the maximum contaminant level of As in municipal drinking water, there has been considerable interest for improved methods to remove As from water. Although Al and Fe hydroxides have been extensively studied as adsorbents for As removal during water treatment, coprecipitated Al:Fe hydroxides have received only minimal attention. The theoretical and experimental feasibility of coprecipitated Al:Fe hydroxide systems were evaluated by studying their mineralogy, stability, and As adsorption and desorption behavior. The broad XRD peaks revealed that Al was substituted into the ferrihydrite structure and that this was the only major product up to about a 2:8 Al:Fe molar ratio. Gibbsite and bayerite were identified when Al content was higher. The rate of recrystallization of ferrihydrite into goethite and hematite was significantly reduced as Al substitution was increased. In general, adsorption capacity of both AsV and AsIII decreased with increase in Al:Fe molar ratio; however, similar AsV adsorption capacities were observed with Fe and Al:Fe hydroxides with Al:(Al+Fe) molar ratios < 0.20. Both AsIII and AsV adsorption isotherms were effectively described by Langmuir and Freundlich equations. Adsorption maxima of AsV on Fe and Al:Fe hydroxides were observed at pH 3 to 7, and that of AsV on Al hydroxide was observed at pH 5.2, with significant decreases in adsorption with increase and decrease in pH. Adsorption maxima of AsIII decreased by approximately 4 % for each 10 % increase in Al substitution up to 5:5 Al:Fe molar ratio. Adsorption maxima of AsIII on Fe and Al:Fe hydroxides were observed at pH 8 to 9. AsIII adsorption on Al hydroxide was negligible. Counterion Ca2+, compared to Na+, enhanced the retention of AsV, especially at pH > 7. Counterion concentration did not significantly affect AsV adsorption. Though phosphate desorbed both AsV and AsIII from all Al:Fe hydroxides, quantitative desorption was never observed. The results of this study indicate the possible utility of coprecipitated Al:Fe hydroxide in wastewater treatment. Based on adsorption/desorption behavior and stability of the Al:Fe hydroxide product, the preferred Al:Fe molar ratio was 2:8.Texas A&M UniversityLoeppert, R. H.2006-04-12T16:06:58Z2006-04-12T16:06:58Z2004-122006-04-12T16:06:58ZBookThesisElectronic Thesistext3974973 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3343en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Arsenic
Fe hydroxide
Al hydroxide
adsorption
spellingShingle Arsenic
Fe hydroxide
Al hydroxide
adsorption
Masue, Yoko
Adsorption, desorption, and stabilization of arsenic on aluminum substituted ferrihydrite
description Because of As toxicity, the complexity of its chemistry, and the recent lowering of the maximum contaminant level of As in municipal drinking water, there has been considerable interest for improved methods to remove As from water. Although Al and Fe hydroxides have been extensively studied as adsorbents for As removal during water treatment, coprecipitated Al:Fe hydroxides have received only minimal attention. The theoretical and experimental feasibility of coprecipitated Al:Fe hydroxide systems were evaluated by studying their mineralogy, stability, and As adsorption and desorption behavior. The broad XRD peaks revealed that Al was substituted into the ferrihydrite structure and that this was the only major product up to about a 2:8 Al:Fe molar ratio. Gibbsite and bayerite were identified when Al content was higher. The rate of recrystallization of ferrihydrite into goethite and hematite was significantly reduced as Al substitution was increased. In general, adsorption capacity of both AsV and AsIII decreased with increase in Al:Fe molar ratio; however, similar AsV adsorption capacities were observed with Fe and Al:Fe hydroxides with Al:(Al+Fe) molar ratios < 0.20. Both AsIII and AsV adsorption isotherms were effectively described by Langmuir and Freundlich equations. Adsorption maxima of AsV on Fe and Al:Fe hydroxides were observed at pH 3 to 7, and that of AsV on Al hydroxide was observed at pH 5.2, with significant decreases in adsorption with increase and decrease in pH. Adsorption maxima of AsIII decreased by approximately 4 % for each 10 % increase in Al substitution up to 5:5 Al:Fe molar ratio. Adsorption maxima of AsIII on Fe and Al:Fe hydroxides were observed at pH 8 to 9. AsIII adsorption on Al hydroxide was negligible. Counterion Ca2+, compared to Na+, enhanced the retention of AsV, especially at pH > 7. Counterion concentration did not significantly affect AsV adsorption. Though phosphate desorbed both AsV and AsIII from all Al:Fe hydroxides, quantitative desorption was never observed. The results of this study indicate the possible utility of coprecipitated Al:Fe hydroxide in wastewater treatment. Based on adsorption/desorption behavior and stability of the Al:Fe hydroxide product, the preferred Al:Fe molar ratio was 2:8.
author2 Loeppert, R. H.
author_facet Loeppert, R. H.
Masue, Yoko
author Masue, Yoko
author_sort Masue, Yoko
title Adsorption, desorption, and stabilization of arsenic on aluminum substituted ferrihydrite
title_short Adsorption, desorption, and stabilization of arsenic on aluminum substituted ferrihydrite
title_full Adsorption, desorption, and stabilization of arsenic on aluminum substituted ferrihydrite
title_fullStr Adsorption, desorption, and stabilization of arsenic on aluminum substituted ferrihydrite
title_full_unstemmed Adsorption, desorption, and stabilization of arsenic on aluminum substituted ferrihydrite
title_sort adsorption, desorption, and stabilization of arsenic on aluminum substituted ferrihydrite
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3343
work_keys_str_mv AT masueyoko adsorptiondesorptionandstabilizationofarseniconaluminumsubstitutedferrihydrite
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