Fluoride removal in water by a hybrid adsorbent lanthanum-carbon
Article
-
- Overview
-
- Research
-
- Identity
-
- Additional Document Info
-
- View All
-
Overview
abstract
-
Various health problems associated with drinking water containing high fluoride levels, have motivated researchers to develop more efficient adsorbents to remove fluoride from water for beneficial concentrations to human health. The objective of this research was to anchor lanthanum oxyhydroxides on a commercial granular activated carbon (GAC) to remove fluoride from water considering the effect of the solution pH, and the presence of co-existing anions and organic matter. The activated carbon was modified with lanthanum oxyhydroxides by impregnation. SEM and XRD were performed in order to determine the crystal structure and morphology of the La(III) particles anchored on the GAC surface. FT-IR and pKa%27s distribution were determined in order to elucidate both the possible mechanism of the lanthanum anchorage on the activated carbon surface and the fluoride adsorption mechanism on the modified material. The results showed that lanthanum ions prefer binding to carboxyl and phenolic groups on the activated carbon surface. Potentiometric titrations revealed that the modified carbon (GAC-La) possesses positive charge at a pH lower than 9. The adsorption capacity of the modified GAC increased five times in contrast to an unmodified GAC adsorption capacity at an initial F- concentration of 20mgL-1. Moreover, the presence of co-existing anions had no effect on the fluoride adsorption capacity at concentrations below 30mgL-1, that indicated high F- affinity by the modified adsorbent material (GAG-La). © 2015 Elsevier Inc.
-
Various health problems associated with drinking water containing high fluoride levels, have motivated researchers to develop more efficient adsorbents to remove fluoride from water for beneficial concentrations to human health. The objective of this research was to anchor lanthanum oxyhydroxides on a commercial granular activated carbon (GAC) to remove fluoride from water considering the effect of the solution pH, and the presence of co-existing anions and organic matter. The activated carbon was modified with lanthanum oxyhydroxides by impregnation. SEM and XRD were performed in order to determine the crystal structure and morphology of the La(III) particles anchored on the GAC surface. FT-IR and pKa's distribution were determined in order to elucidate both the possible mechanism of the lanthanum anchorage on the activated carbon surface and the fluoride adsorption mechanism on the modified material. The results showed that lanthanum ions prefer binding to carboxyl and phenolic groups on the activated carbon surface. Potentiometric titrations revealed that the modified carbon (GAC-La) possesses positive charge at a pH lower than 9. The adsorption capacity of the modified GAC increased five times in contrast to an unmodified GAC adsorption capacity at an initial F- concentration of 20mgL-1. Moreover, the presence of co-existing anions had no effect on the fluoride adsorption capacity at concentrations below 30mgL-1, that indicated high F- affinity by the modified adsorbent material (GAG-La). © 2015 Elsevier Inc.
publication date
funding provided via
published in
Research
keywords
-
Activated carbon; Adsorption; Fluoride; Lanthanum Activated carbon; Adsorbents; Adsorption; Chemicals removal (water treatment); Crystal structure; Fluorine compounds; Ions; Potable water; Titration; Water; Adsorption capacities; Crystal structure and morphology; Fluoride; Fluoride adsorptions; Granular activated carbons; Modified adsorbents; Possible mechanisms; Potentiometric titrations; Lanthanum; activated carbon; adsorbent; drinking water; fluoride; fluoride ion; hydroxyl group; lanthanum; lanthanum oxide; carbon; fluoride; lanthanum; water pollutant; adsorption; adsorption kinetics; Article; crystal structure; desorption; infrared spectroscopy; pH; priority journal; surface area; surface charge; water treatment; adsorption; chemistry; human; isolation and purification; potentiometry; procedures; static electricity; water management; water pollutant; Adsorption; Carbon; Drinking Water; Fluorides; Humans; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Lanthanum; Potentiometry; Static Electricity; Water Pollutants, Chemical; Water Purification
Identity
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
PubMed ID
Additional Document Info
start page
end page
volume