TY - JOUR
T1 - Predicting competitive adsorption behavior of major toxic anionic elements onto activated alumina
T2 - A speciation-based approach
AU - Su, Tingzhi
AU - Guan, Xiaohong
AU - Tang, Yulin
AU - Gu, Guowei
AU - Wang, Jianmin
PY - 2010/4/15
Y1 - 2010/4/15
N2 - Toxic anionic elements such as arsenic, selenium, and vanadium often co-exist in groundwater. These elements may impact each other when adsorption methods are used to remove them. In this study, we investigated the competitive adsorption behavior of As(V), Se(IV), and V(V) onto activated alumina under different pH and surface loading conditions. Results indicated that these anionic elements interfered with each other during adsorption. A speciation-based model was developed to quantify the competitive adsorption behavior of these elements. This model could predict the adsorption data well over the pH range of 1.5-12 for various surface loading conditions, using the same set of adsorption constants obtained from single-sorbate systems. This model has great implications in accurately predicting the field capacity of activated alumina under various local water quality conditions when multiple competitive anionic elements are present.
AB - Toxic anionic elements such as arsenic, selenium, and vanadium often co-exist in groundwater. These elements may impact each other when adsorption methods are used to remove them. In this study, we investigated the competitive adsorption behavior of As(V), Se(IV), and V(V) onto activated alumina under different pH and surface loading conditions. Results indicated that these anionic elements interfered with each other during adsorption. A speciation-based model was developed to quantify the competitive adsorption behavior of these elements. This model could predict the adsorption data well over the pH range of 1.5-12 for various surface loading conditions, using the same set of adsorption constants obtained from single-sorbate systems. This model has great implications in accurately predicting the field capacity of activated alumina under various local water quality conditions when multiple competitive anionic elements are present.
KW - Activated alumina
KW - Arsenic
KW - Competitive adsorption
KW - Selenium
KW - Speciation-based model
KW - Vanadium
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/74449092941
U2 - 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2009.11.052
DO - 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2009.11.052
M3 - 文章
C2 - 20004513
AN - SCOPUS:74449092941
SN - 0304-3894
VL - 176
SP - 466
EP - 472
JO - Journal of Hazardous Materials
JF - Journal of Hazardous Materials
IS - 1-3
ER -