JOURNAL ARTICLE

Removal of Phosphate from Water by Iron/Calcium Oxide-Modified Biochar: Removal Mechanisms and Adsorption Modeling

Shufang ZengXin LanPeng LiuZhongxing ZhangXi ChengNing XuHuilin Yin

Year: 2024 Journal:   Water Vol: 16 (22)Pages: 3245-3245   Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Abstract

Phosphorus (P) pollution is a leading cause of water eutrophication, and metal-modified biochar is an effective adsorbent with the ability to alter the migration capacity of phosphorus. This study uses bamboo as the raw material to prepare metal-modified biochar (ZFCO-BC) loaded with Fe and Ca under N2 conditions at 900 °C, and investigates its adsorption characteristics for phosphate. Batch experimental results show the adsorption capacity of the ZFCO-BC gradually increases (from 4.0 to 69.1 mg/g) as the initial phosphate concentration increases (from 2 to 900 mg/L), mainly through multilayer adsorption. Additionally, as the pH increases from 1 to 7, the adsorption capacity of the ZFCO-BC climbs to reach its maximum value of 48.4 mg/g with an initial phosphate concentration of 150 mg/L. At this pH, phosphate primarily exists as H2PO4− and HPO42−, which both readily react with Fe3+ and Ca2+ in the biochar. Furthermore, the addition of CO32−, HCO3−, NO3−, SO42−, F−, and Cl− each affect the removal rate of phosphate by less than 10%, indicating the ZFCO-BC has a highly efficient and selective phosphate adsorption capacity. A multi-column adsorption experiment designed to achieve long-term and efficient phosphorus removal treated 275.5 pore volumes (PVs) of water over 366 h. The cyclic adsorption–desorption experiment results show that 0.5 M NaOH can effectively leach phosphate from the ZFCO-BC. Observations at the molecular level from P K-edge XANES spectra confirm the removal of low-concentration phosphate is primarily dominated by electrostatic attraction, while the main removal mechanism for high-concentration phosphate is chemical precipitation. This study demonstrates that ZFCO-BC has broad application prospects for phosphate removal from wastewater and as a potential slow-release fertilizer in agriculture.

Keywords:
Biochar Phosphate Adsorption Chemistry Phosphorus Inorganic chemistry Desorption Metal Wastewater Nuclear chemistry Environmental chemistry Environmental engineering Organic chemistry

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3
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1.70
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44
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0.76
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Citation History

Topics

Phosphorus and nutrient management
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
Constructed Wetlands for Wastewater Treatment
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
Adsorption and biosorption for pollutant removal
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Water Science and Technology
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