Vanadium removal by cationized sawdust produced through iodomethane quaternization of triethanolamine grafted raw material

In this study, two-step surface modification of sawdust using triethanolamine (at 180 °C) and iodomethane (at 42 °C) was performed to produce a novel quaternized biosorbent, TEA-I-SD. The characterization studies revealed significant morphological changes in the sawdust and successful quaternization...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2021-09, Vol.278, p.130445-130445, Article 130445
Hauptverfasser: Gogoi, Harshita, Zhang, Ruichi, Matusik, Jakub, Leiviskä, Tiina, Rämö, Jaakko, Tanskanen, Juha
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In this study, two-step surface modification of sawdust using triethanolamine (at 180 °C) and iodomethane (at 42 °C) was performed to produce a novel quaternized biosorbent, TEA-I-SD. The characterization studies revealed significant morphological changes in the sawdust and successful quaternization with a nitrogen content of 5.75%. The highest vanadium removal (96.2%) was achieved at pH 4 (dosage 1 g/L, initial vanadium concentration 19.1 mg/L). Equilibrium was achieved within 8 h of contact time and the adsorption kinetics were well fitted with the pseudo-second-order model. Both film diffusion and intra-particle diffusion contributed to the adsorption process, while the latter was the rate-limiting step. The maximum vanadium adsorption capacity of TEA-I-SD (35.0 mg/g, pH 4) was close to the theoretical value obtained from the Langmuir model. The best fit was achieved with the Redlich-Peterson model, exhibiting a monolayer adsorption phenomenon. Tests with real mine water containing 11 mg/L of vanadium also confirmed its high removal (91.3%, dosage 1 g/L) using TEA-I-SD at pH 4. The TEA-I-SD could be reused three times without significant capacity loss after regeneration, although the desorption efficiency was rather low (synthetic solution: 38.5–40.5% and mine water: 26.2–43.1%). [Display omitted] •Sawdust was cationized using triethanolamine and iodomethane to produce TEA-I-SD.•TEA-I-SD had impressive efficiency for vanadium removal.•Optimal pH for vanadium removal was 4.•TEA-I-SD revealed good potential for mine water treatment.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.130445