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Quantification and isotherm modelling of competitive phosphate and silicate adsorption onto micro-sized granular ferric hydroxide

Adsorption onto ferric hydroxide is a known method to reach very low residual phosphate concentrations. Silicate is omnipresent in surface and industrial waters and reduces the adsorption capacity of ferric hydroxides. The present article focusses on the influences of silicate concentration and cont...

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Autores principales: Hilbrandt, Inga, Lehmann, Vito, Zietzschmann, Frederik, Ruhl, Aki Sebastian, Jekel, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9069472/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35530626
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra04865k
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author Hilbrandt, Inga
Lehmann, Vito
Zietzschmann, Frederik
Ruhl, Aki Sebastian
Jekel, Martin
author_facet Hilbrandt, Inga
Lehmann, Vito
Zietzschmann, Frederik
Ruhl, Aki Sebastian
Jekel, Martin
author_sort Hilbrandt, Inga
collection PubMed
description Adsorption onto ferric hydroxide is a known method to reach very low residual phosphate concentrations. Silicate is omnipresent in surface and industrial waters and reduces the adsorption capacity of ferric hydroxides. The present article focusses on the influences of silicate concentration and contact time on the adsorption of phosphate to a micro-sized iron hydroxide adsorbent (μGFH) and fits adsorption data to multi-component adsorption isotherms. In Berlin drinking water (DOC of approx. 4 mg L(−1)) at pH 7.0, loadings of 24 mg g(−1) P (with 3 mg L(−1) initial PO(4)(3−)–P) and 17 mg L(−1) Si (with 9 mg L(−1) initial Si) were reached. In deionized water, phosphate shows a high percentage of reversible bonds to μGFH while silicate adsorption is not reversible probably due to polymerization. Depending on the initial silicate concentration, phosphate loadings are reduced by 27, 33 and 47% (for equilibrium concentrations of 1.5 mg L(−1)) for 9, 14 and 22 mg L(−1) Si respectively. Out of eight tested multi-component adsorption models, the Extended Freundlich Model Isotherm (EFMI) describes the simultaneous adsorption of phosphate and silicate best. Thus, providing the means to predict and control phosphate removal. Longer contact times of the adsorbent with silicate prior to addition of phosphate reduce phosphate adsorption significantly. Compared to 7 days of contact with silicate (c(0) = 10 mg L(−1)) prior to phosphate (c(0) = 3 mg L(−1)) addition, 28 and 56 days reduce the μGFH capacity for phosphate by 21 and 43%, respectively.
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spelling pubmed-90694722022-05-05 Quantification and isotherm modelling of competitive phosphate and silicate adsorption onto micro-sized granular ferric hydroxide Hilbrandt, Inga Lehmann, Vito Zietzschmann, Frederik Ruhl, Aki Sebastian Jekel, Martin RSC Adv Chemistry Adsorption onto ferric hydroxide is a known method to reach very low residual phosphate concentrations. Silicate is omnipresent in surface and industrial waters and reduces the adsorption capacity of ferric hydroxides. The present article focusses on the influences of silicate concentration and contact time on the adsorption of phosphate to a micro-sized iron hydroxide adsorbent (μGFH) and fits adsorption data to multi-component adsorption isotherms. In Berlin drinking water (DOC of approx. 4 mg L(−1)) at pH 7.0, loadings of 24 mg g(−1) P (with 3 mg L(−1) initial PO(4)(3−)–P) and 17 mg L(−1) Si (with 9 mg L(−1) initial Si) were reached. In deionized water, phosphate shows a high percentage of reversible bonds to μGFH while silicate adsorption is not reversible probably due to polymerization. Depending on the initial silicate concentration, phosphate loadings are reduced by 27, 33 and 47% (for equilibrium concentrations of 1.5 mg L(−1)) for 9, 14 and 22 mg L(−1) Si respectively. Out of eight tested multi-component adsorption models, the Extended Freundlich Model Isotherm (EFMI) describes the simultaneous adsorption of phosphate and silicate best. Thus, providing the means to predict and control phosphate removal. Longer contact times of the adsorbent with silicate prior to addition of phosphate reduce phosphate adsorption significantly. Compared to 7 days of contact with silicate (c(0) = 10 mg L(−1)) prior to phosphate (c(0) = 3 mg L(−1)) addition, 28 and 56 days reduce the μGFH capacity for phosphate by 21 and 43%, respectively. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019-07-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9069472/ /pubmed/35530626 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra04865k Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Hilbrandt, Inga
Lehmann, Vito
Zietzschmann, Frederik
Ruhl, Aki Sebastian
Jekel, Martin
Quantification and isotherm modelling of competitive phosphate and silicate adsorption onto micro-sized granular ferric hydroxide
title Quantification and isotherm modelling of competitive phosphate and silicate adsorption onto micro-sized granular ferric hydroxide
title_full Quantification and isotherm modelling of competitive phosphate and silicate adsorption onto micro-sized granular ferric hydroxide
title_fullStr Quantification and isotherm modelling of competitive phosphate and silicate adsorption onto micro-sized granular ferric hydroxide
title_full_unstemmed Quantification and isotherm modelling of competitive phosphate and silicate adsorption onto micro-sized granular ferric hydroxide
title_short Quantification and isotherm modelling of competitive phosphate and silicate adsorption onto micro-sized granular ferric hydroxide
title_sort quantification and isotherm modelling of competitive phosphate and silicate adsorption onto micro-sized granular ferric hydroxide
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9069472/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35530626
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra04865k
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