Environmentally
friendly and cost-effective adsorbent materials
for arsenic extraction are needed for removing pollutants from groundwater.
Here, lanthanum or zirconium oxide nanoparticle-incorporated sawdust
was used for the removal of arsenic anions from water. The chemically
modified sawdust was fully characterized and used for extraction of
arsenic from water. The influences of ionic strength, pH, and interfering
ionic pollutants toward the extraction efficiency of arsenic anions
were investigated to understand the mechanism. ZrO2-sawdust
showed extraction capacities of 29 and 12 mg/g for arsenite and arsenate
anions, respectively, while La2O3-sawdust extracted
arsenite (22 mg/g) and arsenate (28 mg/g) anions efficiently. Desorption
studies were performed on surface-modified sawdust to check the recyclability.
La2O3-sawdust can be fully regenerated with
no change in arsenic removal efficiency, while ZrO2-sawdust
retains ∼50% of its adsorption efficiency. Such modified renewable
bioadsorbents are useful for developing environmentally friendly materials
for water purification