4.7 Article

Biosorption of phenanthrene by pure algae and field-collected planktons and their fractions

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 93, Issue 1, Pages 61-68

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2013.04.068

Keywords

Phenanthrene; Biosorption; Algae; Lipid (LP); Acid nonhydrolyzable carbon (NHC)

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. Guangdong Province [U1201235]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41121063]
  4. GIGCAS 135 project [Y234081001]
  5. Earmarked Foundation of the State Key Laboratory [SKLOG2009A04]

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The biosorption isotherms for phenanthrene (Phen) by cultured algae, field-collected plankton, and market algae samples (OSs) and their fractions (lipid-LP, lipid free carbon-LF, alkaline nonhydrolyzable carbon-ANHC, and acid nonhydrolyzable carbon-NHC) were established. All the biosorption isotherms are well fitted by the Freundlich model. The biosorption isotherms for the ANHC and NHC fractions are nonlinear and for the other fractions are linear. It was found that the NHC fractions are chemically and structurally different from other fractions by using elemental analysis and Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), consisting mainly of aliphatic polymethylene carbon. The average K-OC values for Phen at C-e = 0.005S(w) are 10 706 +/- 2768 mL g(-1) and 95 843 +/- 55 817 mL g(-1) for the bulk market algal samples and their NHC isolates, respectively. As the NHC fraction for Porphyra contains higher polymethylene carbon than that for Seaweed or Spirulina, it exhibits higher biosorption capacity. Moreover, the log K-OC values are significantly higher for the field-collected samples than for the market algae and cultured algae samples. The multivariate correlation shows that the log K-OC values are positively related to the LP contents, and negatively to the C/N ratios for the original algal samples. Furthermore, the log K-OC values are negatively related to the polarity indices (O/C and O + N/C) for the original samples and their fractions excluding LP fractions. These observations help to understand the role of polarity, LP and NHC fractions, and aliphatic structures in the biosorption of Phen, which requires more attention in the examination of sorption processes in the natural environment. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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