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Arsenic Removal from Aqueous Solutions Using Fe(3)O(4)-HBC Composite: Effect of Calcination on Adsorbents Performance

The presence of elevated concentration of arsenic in water sources is considered to be health hazard globally. Calcination process is known to change the surface efficacy of the adsorbent. In current study, five adsorbent composites: uncalcined and calcined Fe(3)O(4)-HBC prepared at different temper...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Baig, Shams Ali, Sheng, TianTian, Sun, Chen, Xue, XiaoQin, Tan, LiSha, Xu, XinHua
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4072660/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24967645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0100704
Descripción
Sumario:The presence of elevated concentration of arsenic in water sources is considered to be health hazard globally. Calcination process is known to change the surface efficacy of the adsorbent. In current study, five adsorbent composites: uncalcined and calcined Fe(3)O(4)-HBC prepared at different temperatures (400°C and 1000°C) and environment (air and nitrogen) were investigated for the adsorptive removal of As(V) and As(III) from aqueous solutions determining the influence of solution's pH, contact time, temperature, arsenic concentration and phosphate anions. Characterizations from FTIR, XRD, HT-XRD, BET and SEM analyses revealed that the Fe(3)O(4)-HBC composite at higher calcination temperature under nitrogen formed a new product (fayalite, Fe(2)SiO(4)) via phase transformation. In aqueous medium, ligand exchange between arsenic and the effective sorbent site ( = FeOOH) was established from the release of hydroxyl group. Langmuir model suggested data of the five adsorbent composites follow the order: Fe(3)O(4)-HBC-1000°C(N(2))>Fe(3)O(4)-HBC (uncalcined)>Fe(3)O(4)-HBC-400°C(N(2))>Fe(3)O(4)-HBC-400°C(air)>Fe(3)O(4)-HBC-1000°C(air) and the maximum As(V) and As(III) adsorption capacities were found to be about 3.35 mg g(−1) and 3.07 mg g(−1), respectively. The adsorption of As(V) and As(III) remained stable in a wider pH range (4–10) using Fe(3)O(4)-HBC-1000°C(N(2)). Additionally, adsorption data fitted well in pseudo-second-order (R (2)>0.99) rather than pseudo-first-order kinetics model. The adsorption of As(V) and As(III) onto adsorbent composites increase with increase in temperatures indicating that it is an endothermic process. Phosphate concentration (0.0l mM or higher) strongly inhibited As(V) and As(III) removal through the mechanism of competitive adsorption. This study suggests that the selective calcination process could be useful to improve the adsorbent efficiency for enhanced arsenic removal from contaminated water.