4.6 Article

Silica- Iron Oxide Nanocomposite Enhanced with Porogen Agent Used for Arsenic Removal

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15155366

Keywords

arsenic; adsorption; sol-gel method; silica matrix; nanocomposite; iron oxide

Funding

  1. Romanian Ministry of Research, Innovation and Digitalization [PFE 26/30.12.2021]

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This study aims to remove arsenic from water by adsorption on a nanocomposite material obtained through the sol-gel method. The material was synthesized and characterized using various physico-chemical methods. The study also investigated the adsorption mechanism through kinetic, thermodynamic, and equilibrium studies. The results showed that the material had a high adsorption capacity and efficiency, and it was able to successfully treat water with high arsenic content.
This study aims to remove arsenic from an aqueous medium by adsorption on a nanocomposite material obtained by the sol-gel method starting from matrices of silica, iron oxide and NaF (SiO2/Fe(acac)(3)/NaF). Initially, the study focused on the synthesis and characterization of the material by physico-chemical methods such as: X-ray diffraction, FT-IR spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, and magnetization. Textural properties were obtained using nitrogen adsorption/desorption measurements. The zero load point, pHpZc, was also determined by the method of bringing the studied system into equilibrium. In addition, this study also provides a comprehensive discussion of the mechanism of arsenic adsorption by conducting kinetic, thermodynamic and equilibrium studies. Studies have been performed to determine the effects of adsorbent dose, pH and initial concentration of arsenic solution, material/arsenic contact time and temperature on adsorption capacity and material efficiency. Three theoretical adsorption isotherms were used, namely Langmuir, Freundlich and Sips, to describe the experimental results. The Sips isotherm was found to best describe the experimental data obtained, the maximum adsorption capacity being similar to 575 mu g As(III)/g. The adsorption process was best described by pseudo-second order kinetics. Studies have been performed at different pH values to establish not only the optimal pH at which the adsorption capacity is maximum, but also which is the predominantly adsorbed species. The effect of pH and desorption studies have shown that ion exchange and the physiosorption mechanism are implicated in the adsorption process. From a thermodynamic point of view, parameters such as Delta G degrees, Delta H degrees and Delta S degrees were evaluated to establish the mechanism of the adsorption process. Desorption studies have been performed to determine the efficiency of the material and it has been shown that the material can be used successfully to treat a real-world example of deep water with a high arsenic content.

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