4.8 Article

Batch investigations on P immobilization from wastewaters and sediment using natural calcium rich sepiolite as a reactive material

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue 13, Pages 4247-4258

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2013.04.044

Keywords

Phosphorus; Lake eutrophication; Active filtration; In situ capping; Natural calcium-rich sepiolite (NCSP)

Funding

  1. State major project of water pollution control and management [2012ZX 07103-005]
  2. Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences [NIGLAS2010KXJ01, NIGLAS2010QD11]

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Phosphorus from wastewaters and sediment flux to surface water represents a major source of lake eutrophication. Active filtration and in situ capping (which refers to placement of a covering or cap over an in-situ deposit of contaminated sediment) are widely used as a means to immobilize phosphorus from wastewaters and sediment, to mitigate lake eutrophication. There is, however, a need to develop more efficient means of immobilizing phosphorus through the development of binding agents. In this study, natural calcium-rich sepiolite (NCSP) was calcined at a range of temperatures, to enhance its phosphorus removal capacity. Batch studies showed that the 900 degrees C calcinated NCSP (NCSP900) exhibited excellent sorption performance, attaining a phosphorus removal efficiency of 80.0%-99.9% in the range of 0.05 mg/L -800 mg/L phosphorus concentrations with a dosage of 20 g/L. The material displayed rapid sorption rate (maximum amount of 99.9% of phosphate removal with 5 min) and could lower the very high phosphate concentration (200 mg/L) to less than 0.1 mg/L after 4 h adsorption. It was also noted that factors such as pH, competing anions (except HCO3-) and humic acid, had no effect on phosphorus removal capacity. The sediment immobilization experiment indicated that NCSP900 had the capacity to transform reactive phosphorus into inert-phosphorus and significantly reduce the amount of algal-bioavailable phosphorus. The excellent phosphorus binding performance of NCSP900 was mainly due to the improvement of point of zero charge (pH(PZC)) as well as the transformation of the inert-calcium of NCSP to active free CaO during calcination. Phosphorus speciation indicated that phosphorus was mainly captured by relatively stable calcium-bound phosphorus (Ca-P) precipitation, which can account for 80.1% of the total phosphorus. This study showed that NCSP900 could be used as an efficient binding agent for the sequestration of phosphorus from wastewaters and sediment. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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