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Carbon isotope effects in the sorption of chlorinated ethenes on biochar and activated carbon

As an alternative to activated carbon, biochar is a promising, environmentally friendly sorbent that can be used to remove organic groundwater pollutants, such as chlorinated ethenes (CEs). Stable isotope fractionation in biofilters is used to quantify pollutant degradation and to distinguish degrad...

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Autores principales: Leitner, Simon, Sobanski, Fridjof, Soja, Gerhard, Keiblinger, Katharina, Stumpp, Christine, Watzinger, Andrea
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10590956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37876456
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20823
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author Leitner, Simon
Sobanski, Fridjof
Soja, Gerhard
Keiblinger, Katharina
Stumpp, Christine
Watzinger, Andrea
author_facet Leitner, Simon
Sobanski, Fridjof
Soja, Gerhard
Keiblinger, Katharina
Stumpp, Christine
Watzinger, Andrea
author_sort Leitner, Simon
collection PubMed
description As an alternative to activated carbon, biochar is a promising, environmentally friendly sorbent that can be used to remove organic groundwater pollutants, such as chlorinated ethenes (CEs). Stable isotope fractionation in biofilters is used to quantify pollutant degradation and to distinguish degradation from pollutant sorption on e.g. biochar. However, the sorption of CEs on biochar, and the potential abiotic fractionation processes remain to be tested. The sorption process of CEs and ethene on activated carbon and biochar was investigated with regard to the isotope effects for the differentiation from microbial degradation processes. Results from physical and chemical characterization of biochar indicated that biochar feedstock and pyrolysis conditions determined sorption performance depending on the surface chemistry and the pore size distribution of the coarse sorbent particles. The sorption capacity of the activated carbon was significantly higher with highly chlorinated ethenes, but similar to the biochars with low chlorination. Apparent carbon isotope fractionation factors (ε) of +0.1 to −4.4 ‰ were found above measurement uncertainties of GC/IRMS. The extent of isotope enrichment of the (13)C bearing isotopologues in the residual aqueous phase (ε < 0) was characteristic for individual pairs of pollutant and sorbent material and could be related to pore-filling processes limited by the micropore size distribution of sorbent materials and the chemical properties of sorbed pollutants. Especially the large isotope fractionation during the sorption of ethene led to the assumption that diffusion processes within the pore matrix of the sorbent particles contributed to the observed isotope effects, but should still be considered a property of sorption. Concluding on the results indicated that sorption processes can have a significant contribution to carbon isotope fractionation in CEs and ethene. These should not be neglected in the evaluation of biofilters for groundwater purification, in which CEs are simultaneously degraded by microbes.
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spelling pubmed-105909562023-10-24 Carbon isotope effects in the sorption of chlorinated ethenes on biochar and activated carbon Leitner, Simon Sobanski, Fridjof Soja, Gerhard Keiblinger, Katharina Stumpp, Christine Watzinger, Andrea Heliyon Research Article As an alternative to activated carbon, biochar is a promising, environmentally friendly sorbent that can be used to remove organic groundwater pollutants, such as chlorinated ethenes (CEs). Stable isotope fractionation in biofilters is used to quantify pollutant degradation and to distinguish degradation from pollutant sorption on e.g. biochar. However, the sorption of CEs on biochar, and the potential abiotic fractionation processes remain to be tested. The sorption process of CEs and ethene on activated carbon and biochar was investigated with regard to the isotope effects for the differentiation from microbial degradation processes. Results from physical and chemical characterization of biochar indicated that biochar feedstock and pyrolysis conditions determined sorption performance depending on the surface chemistry and the pore size distribution of the coarse sorbent particles. The sorption capacity of the activated carbon was significantly higher with highly chlorinated ethenes, but similar to the biochars with low chlorination. Apparent carbon isotope fractionation factors (ε) of +0.1 to −4.4 ‰ were found above measurement uncertainties of GC/IRMS. The extent of isotope enrichment of the (13)C bearing isotopologues in the residual aqueous phase (ε < 0) was characteristic for individual pairs of pollutant and sorbent material and could be related to pore-filling processes limited by the micropore size distribution of sorbent materials and the chemical properties of sorbed pollutants. Especially the large isotope fractionation during the sorption of ethene led to the assumption that diffusion processes within the pore matrix of the sorbent particles contributed to the observed isotope effects, but should still be considered a property of sorption. Concluding on the results indicated that sorption processes can have a significant contribution to carbon isotope fractionation in CEs and ethene. These should not be neglected in the evaluation of biofilters for groundwater purification, in which CEs are simultaneously degraded by microbes. Elsevier 2023-10-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10590956/ /pubmed/37876456 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20823 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Leitner, Simon
Sobanski, Fridjof
Soja, Gerhard
Keiblinger, Katharina
Stumpp, Christine
Watzinger, Andrea
Carbon isotope effects in the sorption of chlorinated ethenes on biochar and activated carbon
title Carbon isotope effects in the sorption of chlorinated ethenes on biochar and activated carbon
title_full Carbon isotope effects in the sorption of chlorinated ethenes on biochar and activated carbon
title_fullStr Carbon isotope effects in the sorption of chlorinated ethenes on biochar and activated carbon
title_full_unstemmed Carbon isotope effects in the sorption of chlorinated ethenes on biochar and activated carbon
title_short Carbon isotope effects in the sorption of chlorinated ethenes on biochar and activated carbon
title_sort carbon isotope effects in the sorption of chlorinated ethenes on biochar and activated carbon
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10590956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37876456
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20823
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