Preparation and characterization of MgO hybrid biochar and its mechanism for high efficient recovery of phosphorus from aqueous media
Conversion of organic waste into engineered metal-biochar composite is an effective way of enhancing biochar’s efficiency for adsorptive capture of phosphorus (P) from aqueous media. Thus, various strategies have been created for the production of metal-biochar composites; however, the complex prepa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biochar (Online) 2022-12, Vol.4 (1), p.1-15, Article 40 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Conversion of organic waste into engineered metal-biochar composite is an effective way of enhancing biochar’s efficiency for adsorptive capture of phosphorus (P) from aqueous media. Thus, various strategies have been created for the production of metal-biochar composites; however, the complex preparation steps, high-cost metal salt reagent application, or extreme process equipment requirements involved in those strategies limited the large-scale production of metal-biochar composites. In this study, a novel biochar composite rich in magnesium oxides (MFBC) was directly produced through co-pyrolysis of magnesite with food waste; the product, MFBC was used to adsorptively capture P from solution and bio-liquid wastewater. The results showed that compared to the pristine food waste biochar, MFBC was a uniformly hybrid MgO biochar composite with a P capture capacity of 523.91 mg/g. The capture of P by MFBC was fitted using the Langmuir and pseudo-first-order kinetic models. The P adsorptive capture was controlled by MgHPO
4
formation and electrostatic attraction, which was affected by the coexisting F
−
and CO
3
2−
ions. MFBC could recover more than 98% of P from the solution and bio-liquid wastewater. Although the P-adsorbed MFBC showed very limited reusability but it can be substituted for phosphate fertiliser in agricultural practices. This study provided an innovative technology for preparing MgO-biochar composite against P recovery from aqueous media, and also highlighted high-value-added approaches for resource utilization of bio-liquid wastewater and food waste.
Graphical Abstract
Highlights
Co-pyrolysis of magnesite with food waste generated MgO hybrid biochar composite.
MgO hybrid biochar showed a high phosphorus recovery capacity (523.9 mg/g).
Phosphorus recovery was controlled by MgHPO
4
formation and electrostatic attraction.
MgO hybrid biochar recovered > 98% of P from solution and bio-liquid wastewater.
Recovered phosphorus is a slow-release fertilizer available for agriculture use. |
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ISSN: | 2524-7972 2524-7867 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s42773-022-00171-0 |