10 research outputs found
Identification of potential soil adsorbent for the removal of hazardous metals from aqueous phase
The present study attempted to identify the efficient hazardous
metal-removing sorbent from specific types of soil, upper and middle
layer shirasu, shell fossil, tuff, akadama and kanuma soils of Japan by
physico-chemical and metal (arsenic, cadmium and lead) removal
characterizations. The physico-chemical characteristics of soil were
evaluated using X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy with
energy dispersive spectroscopy techniques, whereas metal removal
properties of soil were characterized by analyzing removal capacity and
sorption kinetics of potential metal-removing soils. The chemical
characteristics revealed that all soils are prevalently constituted of
silicon dioxide (21.83-78.58 %), aluminum oxide (4.13-38 %) and ferrous
oxide (0.835-7.7 %), whereas calcium oxide showed the highest
percentage (65.36 %) followed by silicon dioxide (21.83 %) in tuff
soil. The results demonstrated that arsenic removal efficiency was
higher in elevated aluminum oxide-containing akadama (0.00452 mg/L/g/h)
and kanuma (0.00225 mg/L/g/h) soils, whereas cadmium (0.00634 mg/L/g/h)
and lead (0.00693 mg/L/g/h) removal efficiencies were maximum in
elevated calcium oxide-containing tuff soil. Physico-chemical sorption
and ion exchange processes are the metal removal mechanisms. The
critical appraisal of three metal removal data also clearly revealed
cadmium > lead > arsenic order of removal efficiency in different
soils, except in tuff and akadama soils followed by lead > cadmium
> arsenic. It clearly signified that each type of soil had a
specific metal adsorption affinity which was regulated by the specific
chemical composition. It may be concluded that akadama would be
potential arsenic-removing and tuff would be efficient cadmium and
lead-removing soil sorbents