Cationic and anionic heavy metal contaminants generally co-exist in practical industrial effluent, and simultaneously removal of these species is a bottleneck for most of the bio-adsorbents because of their contrary… Click to show full abstract
Cationic and anionic heavy metal contaminants generally co-exist in practical industrial effluent, and simultaneously removal of these species is a bottleneck for most of the bio-adsorbents because of their contrary charge. In this work, pinewood sawdust derived engineered biochar (BC) was fabricated with MgAl layered double hydroxide (MgAl-LDH) nanosheets, which could efficiently and simultaneously capture heavy metal cations and oxyanions from wastewater. The synergetic effect between loaded MgAl-LDH and BC substantially improves its adsorption performance towards both cationic and anionic contaminants, i.e., Pb2+ and CrO42-. The adsorption capacity of MgAl-LDH/BC for Pb2+ reached 591.2 mg/g, which is 263% higher than that of BC, and in the case of CrO42-, the adsorption capacity is 330.8 mg/g, 416% higher than that of BC. The elimination of Pb2+ was mainly attributed to forming complexations with surface functional groups. While for oxyanions removal, CrO42- can be reduced to Cr3+ by functional groups, and then generated Cr3+ could replace Al3+ via morphic substitution, consequently formed an MgCr-LDH structure. Further, in the continuous fixed-bed column study, 225 bed volume of simulating electroplating wastewater co-existed with Pb2+ and CrO42- can be efficiently treated. Hence, this study sheds light on the engineered biochar design to efficiently and simultaneously capture heavy metal cations and oxyanions and its feasibility on real wastewater purification.
               
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