3.8 Article

Iron and Magnesium Impregnation of Avocado Seed Biochar for Aqueous Phosphate Removal

Journal

CLEAN TECHNOLOGIES
Volume 4, Issue 3, Pages 690-702

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cleantechnol4030042

Keywords

biochar; metal impregnation; phosphate adsorption; precipitation; pH effect

Funding

  1. Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU)/Minority Institutions (MI) Summer Faculty Research Fellowship Program - U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) [169642]

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This study investigates the use of biochar for removing phosphate from water, and explores the effects of surface modifications with iron or magnesium. The results show that iron-loaded biochar performs better at low concentrations, while magnesium-loaded biochar outperforms iron-loaded biochar at high concentrations.
There has been increasing interest in using biochar for nutrient removal from water, and its application for anionic nutrient removal such as in phosphate (PO43-) necessitates surface modifications of raw biochar. This study produced avocado seed biochar (AB), impregnated Fe- or Mg-(hydr)oxide onto biochar (post-pyrolysis), and tested their performance for aqueous phosphate removal. The Fe- or Mg-loaded biochar was prepared in either high (1:8 of biochar to metal salt in terms of mass ratio) or low (1:2) loading rates via the co-precipitation method. A total of 5 biochar materials (unmodified AB, AB + High Fe, AB + Low Fe, AB + High Mg, and AB + Low Mg) were characterized according to their selected physicochemical properties, and their phosphate adsorption performance was tested through pH effect and adsorption isotherm experiments. Fe-loaded AB contained Fe3O4, while Mg-loaded AB contained Mg(OH)(2). The metal (hydr)oxide inclusion was higher in Fe-loaded AB. Mg-loaded AB showed a unique free O-H functional group, while Fe-loaded AB showed an increase in its specific surface area more than 10-times compared to unmodified AB (1.8 m(2) g(-1)). The effect of the initial pH on phosphate adsorption was not consistent between Fe-(anion adsorption envelope) vs. Mg-loaded AB. The phosphate adsorption capacity was higher with Fe-loaded AB in low concentration ranges (<= 50 mg L-1), while Mg-loaded AB outperformed Fe-loaded AB in high concentration ranges (75-500 mg L-1). The phosphate adsorption isotherm by Fe-loaded AB fit well with the Langmuir model (R-2 = 0.91-0.96), indicating the adsorptive surfaces were relatively homogeneous. Mg-loaded biochar, however, fit much better with Freundlich model (R-2 = 0.94-0.96), indicating the presence of heterogenous adsorptive surfaces. No substantial benefit of high loading rates in metal impregnation was found for phosphate adsorption. The enhanced phosphate removal by Mg-loaded biochar in high concentration ranges highlights the important role of the chemical precipitation of phosphate associated with dissolved Mg2+.

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