JOURNAL ARTICLE

Removal of Selenate from Water by Zerovalent Iron

Yiqiang ZhangJuanfang WangChris AmrheinW. T. Frankenberger

Year: 2005 Journal:   Journal of Environmental Quality Vol: 34 (2)Pages: 487-495   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

ABSTRACT Zerovalent iron (ZVI) has been widely used in the removal of environmental contaminants from water. In this study, ZVI was used to remove selenate [Se(VI)] at a level of 1000 μg L −1 in the presence of varying concentrations of Cl − , SO 2− 4 , NO − 3 , HCO − 3 , and PO 3− 4 Results showed that Se(VI) was rapidly removed during the corrosion of ZVI to iron oxyhydroxides (Fe OH ). During the 16 h of the experiments, 100 and 56% of the added Se(VI) was removed in 10 m M Cl − and SO 2− 4 solutions under a closed contained system, respectively. Under an open condition, 100 and 93% of the added Se(VI) were removed in the Cl − and SO 2− 4 solutions, respectively. Analysis of Se species in ZVI–Fe OH revealed that selenite [Se(IV)] and nonextractable Se increased during the first 2 to 4 h of reaction, with a decrease of Se(VI) in the Cl − experiment and no detection of Se(VI) in the SO 2− 4 experiment. Two mechanisms can be attributed to the rapid removal of Se(VI) from the solutions. One is the reduction of Se(VI) to Se(IV), followed by rapid adsorption of Se(IV) to Fe OH The other is the adsorption of Se(VI) directly to Fe OH , followed by its reduction to Se(IV). The results also show that there was little effect on Se(VI) removal in the presence of Cl − (5, 50, and 100 m M ), NO − 3 (1, 5, and 10 m M ), SO 2− 4 (5 m M ), HCO − 3 (1 and 5 m M ), or PO 3− 4 (1 m M ) and only a slight effect in the presence of SO 2− 4 (50 and 100 m M ), HCO − 3 (10 m M ), and PO 3− 4 (5 m M ) during a 2‐d experiment, whereas 10 m M PO 3− 4 significantly inhibited Se(VI) removal. This work suggests that ZVI may be an effective agent to remove Se from Se‐contaminated agricultural drainage water.

Keywords:
Selenate Zerovalent iron Chemistry Selenium Adsorption Nuclear chemistry Inorganic chemistry

Metrics

99
Cited By
2.88
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
32
Refs
0.90
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Environmental remediation with nanomaterials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Arsenic contamination and mitigation
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Environmental Chemistry
Heavy Metal Exposure and Toxicity
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.