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Agricultural wastes from wheat, barley, flax and grape for the efficient removal of Cd from contaminated water

Agricultural production results in wastes that can be re-used to improve the quality of the environment. This work has investigated for the first time the use of abundant, un-modified agricultural wastes and by-products (AWBs) from grape, wheat, barley and flax production, to reduce the concentratio...

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Autores principales: Melia, Patrick M., Busquets, Rosa, Ray, Santanu, Cundy, Andrew B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9091462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35558207
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra07877g
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author Melia, Patrick M.
Busquets, Rosa
Ray, Santanu
Cundy, Andrew B.
author_facet Melia, Patrick M.
Busquets, Rosa
Ray, Santanu
Cundy, Andrew B.
author_sort Melia, Patrick M.
collection PubMed
description Agricultural production results in wastes that can be re-used to improve the quality of the environment. This work has investigated for the first time the use of abundant, un-modified agricultural wastes and by-products (AWBs) from grape, wheat, barley and flax production, to reduce the concentration of Cd, a highly toxic and mobile heavy metal, in contaminated water. At concentrations of 1.1 mg Cd per L, flax and grape waste were found superior in removing Cd compared with a granular activated carbon used in water treatment, which is both more expensive and entails greater CO(2) emissions in its production. At a pH representative of mine effluents, where Cd presents its greatest mobility and risk as a pollutant, grape and flax waste showed capacity for effective bulk water treatment due to rapid removal kinetics and moderate adsorption properties: reaching equilibrium within 183 and 8 min – adsorption capacities were determined as 3.99 and 3.36 mg Cd per g, respectively. The capacity to clean contaminated effluents was not correlated with the surface area of the biosorbents. Surface chemistry analysis indicated that Cd removal is associated with exchange with Ca, and chemisorption involving CdCO(3), CdS and CdO groups. This work indicates that some AWBs can be directly (i.e. without pre-treatment or modification) used in bulk to remediate effluents contaminated with heavy metals, without requiring further cost or energy input, making them potentially suitable for low-cost treatment of persistent (e.g. via mine drainage) or acute (e.g. spillages) discharges in rural and other areas.
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spelling pubmed-90914622022-05-11 Agricultural wastes from wheat, barley, flax and grape for the efficient removal of Cd from contaminated water Melia, Patrick M. Busquets, Rosa Ray, Santanu Cundy, Andrew B. RSC Adv Chemistry Agricultural production results in wastes that can be re-used to improve the quality of the environment. This work has investigated for the first time the use of abundant, un-modified agricultural wastes and by-products (AWBs) from grape, wheat, barley and flax production, to reduce the concentration of Cd, a highly toxic and mobile heavy metal, in contaminated water. At concentrations of 1.1 mg Cd per L, flax and grape waste were found superior in removing Cd compared with a granular activated carbon used in water treatment, which is both more expensive and entails greater CO(2) emissions in its production. At a pH representative of mine effluents, where Cd presents its greatest mobility and risk as a pollutant, grape and flax waste showed capacity for effective bulk water treatment due to rapid removal kinetics and moderate adsorption properties: reaching equilibrium within 183 and 8 min – adsorption capacities were determined as 3.99 and 3.36 mg Cd per g, respectively. The capacity to clean contaminated effluents was not correlated with the surface area of the biosorbents. Surface chemistry analysis indicated that Cd removal is associated with exchange with Ca, and chemisorption involving CdCO(3), CdS and CdO groups. This work indicates that some AWBs can be directly (i.e. without pre-treatment or modification) used in bulk to remediate effluents contaminated with heavy metals, without requiring further cost or energy input, making them potentially suitable for low-cost treatment of persistent (e.g. via mine drainage) or acute (e.g. spillages) discharges in rural and other areas. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9091462/ /pubmed/35558207 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra07877g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Melia, Patrick M.
Busquets, Rosa
Ray, Santanu
Cundy, Andrew B.
Agricultural wastes from wheat, barley, flax and grape for the efficient removal of Cd from contaminated water
title Agricultural wastes from wheat, barley, flax and grape for the efficient removal of Cd from contaminated water
title_full Agricultural wastes from wheat, barley, flax and grape for the efficient removal of Cd from contaminated water
title_fullStr Agricultural wastes from wheat, barley, flax and grape for the efficient removal of Cd from contaminated water
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural wastes from wheat, barley, flax and grape for the efficient removal of Cd from contaminated water
title_short Agricultural wastes from wheat, barley, flax and grape for the efficient removal of Cd from contaminated water
title_sort agricultural wastes from wheat, barley, flax and grape for the efficient removal of cd from contaminated water
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9091462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35558207
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra07877g
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