4.6 Article

Removal of Borate Ions from Wastewater Using an Adsorbent Prepared from Waste Concrete (PAdeCS)

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 7, Issue 40, Pages 35545-35551

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c02625

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This study investigated the removal of boron from model wastewater using PAdeCS, a material derived from waste concrete. Three different methods of boron removal were examined: adsorption with untreated PAdeCS, adsorption with heat-treated ettringite-enriched PAdeCS, and coagulation-sedimentation method. The coagulation-sedimentation method showed the highest boron removal performance, rapidly reducing the boron concentration in the wastewater to below the Japanese effluent standard. The heat-treated ettringite-enriched PAdeCS also exhibited improved boron removal compared to untreated PAdeCS.
The removal of boron from model wastewater using PAdeCS, a material derived from waste concrete, was studied. Three different types of boron removal methods were examined: adsorption with untreated PAdeCS, adsorption with heat-treated ettringite-enriched PAdeCS, and coagulation- sedimentation method by mixing untreated PAdeCS as a calcium source and aluminum sulfate as an aluminum and sulfate ion source for the formation of ettringite. The highest boron removal performance was observed for the coagulation-sedimentation method, where the boron concentration in the model wastewater decreased rapidly from 100 mg/L to the level below the Japanese effluent standard at 10 mg/L when the weight ratio of PAdeCS addition into water is 4.0% with aluminum sulfate, of which the added amount corresponds to the stoichiometric condition for the formation of ettringite (Ca:Al:SO42- = 6:2:3). The heat-treated ettringite-enriched PAdeCS also showed higher boron removal performances compared with untreated PAdeCS. The dependency of the boron removal capacity on the aqueous boron concentration can be expressed by the Langmuir equation for all the cases. The maximum capacity (qm) values were 1.83, 3.39, and 3.02 mg/g-solid for adsorption with untreated PAdeCS, adsorption with heat-treated ettringite-enriched PAdeCS, and coagulation-sedimentation, respectively. These capacities were higher or comparable with the ones reported in the literature.

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