Conversion of seaweed waste to biochar for the removal of heavy metal ions from aqueous solution: A sustainable method to address eutrophication problem in water bodies

The present study investigated the sustainable approach for wastewater treatment using waste algal blooms. The current study investigated the removal of toxic metals namely chromium (Cr), nickel (Ni), and zinc (Zn) from aqueous solutions in batch and column studies using biochar produced by the mari...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental research 2024-01, Vol.241, p.117551-117551, Article 117551
Hauptverfasser: Ravindiran, Gokulan, Rajamanickam, Sivarethinamohan, Ramalingam, Muralikrishnan, Hayder, Gasim, Sathaiah, Balamurugan Karupaiya, Gaddam, Madhava Krishna Reddy, Muniasamy, Senthil Kumar, Arunkumar, Priya
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The present study investigated the sustainable approach for wastewater treatment using waste algal blooms. The current study investigated the removal of toxic metals namely chromium (Cr), nickel (Ni), and zinc (Zn) from aqueous solutions in batch and column studies using biochar produced by the marine algae Ulva reticulata. SEM/EDX, FTIR, and XRD were used to examine the adsorbents' properties and stability. The removal efficiency of toxic metals in batch operations was investigated by varying the parameters, which included pH, biochar dose, initial metal ion concentration, and contact time. Similarly, in the column study, the removal efficiency of heavy metal ions was investigated by varying bed height, flow rate, and initial metal ion concentration. Response Surface Methodology (Central Composite Design (CCD)) was used to confirm the linearity between the observed and estimated values of the adsorption quantity. The packed bed column demonstrated successful removal rates of 90.38% for Cr, 91.23% for Ni, and 89.92% for Zn heavy metals from aqueous solutions, under a controlled environment. The breakthrough analysis also shows that the Thomas and Adams-Bohart models best fit the regression values, allowing prior breakthroughs in the packed bed column to be predicted. Desorption studies were conducted to understand sorption and elution during different regeneration cycles. Adding 0.3 N sulfuric acid over 40 min resulted in the highest desorption rate of the column and adsorbent used for all three metal ions. •Chromium (90.38%), Nickel (91.23), and Zinc (89.92%) were achieved.•U.reticulata biochar was produced at 400 °C.•0.3 N sulfuric acid for 40 min resulted in the highest desorption efficiency.•Bed depth of 10 cm, flowrate of 5 mL/min and concentration of 50 mg/L is optimum.
ISSN:0013-9351
1096-0953
DOI:10.1016/j.envres.2023.117551