4.7 Article

Use of adsorption using granular activated carbon (GAC) for the enhancement of removal of chromium from synthetic wastewater by electrocoagulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 161, Issue 1, Pages 575-580

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2008.03.113

Keywords

Adsorption; Electrocoagulation; Chromium (VI); Granular activated Carbon (GAC)

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The present work deals with removal of hexavalent chromium from synthetic effluents in a batch stirred electrocoagulation cell with iron-aluminium electrode pair coupled with adsorption using granular activated carbon (GAC). Several working parameters Such as pH, Current density, adsorbent concentration and operating time were Studied in an attempt to achieve higher removal capacity. Results obtained with synthetic wastewater revealed that most effective removal capacities of chromium (VI) could be achieved when the initial pH was near 8. The removal of chromium (VI) during electrocoagulation, is due to the combined effect of chemical precipitation, coprecipitation. sweep coagulation and adsorption. In addition, increasing current density in a range of 6.7-26.7 mA/cm(2) and operating time from 20 to 100 min enhanced the treatment rate to reduce metal ion concentration below admissible legal levels. The addition of GAC as adsorbent resulted in remarkable increase in the removal rate of chromium at lower current densities and operating time, than the conventional electrocoagulation process. The method was found to be highly efficient and relatively fast compared to existing conventional techniques. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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