Abstract Treating water containing hazardous toxins by using a simple and inexpensive method is essential for human healthcare and environment. Here, the highly efficient removal of arsenic, lead, iron and… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Treating water containing hazardous toxins by using a simple and inexpensive method is essential for human healthcare and environment. Here, the highly efficient removal of arsenic, lead, iron and aluminum pollutants (>99.5%) from water were evaluated through batch and filter-like fixed column designs by using microscopic titanium oxide and oxyfluoride captors, to produce toxin-free water for human use. The captors/adsorbents were fabricated within new different hierarchical structures, such as banana clusters, dice cubes, tower sheets, and round wickers. These hierarchical structures of adsorbents offer multi-directional trapping of targeted toxins during the continuous columnar-flow process as (i) axial tunneling, (ii) zigzag cave, (iii) layer-like sandwich, and (iv) spiral squirrel wicker binding orientations. The experimental finding showed high adsorption capacity of TiO2-banana cluster toward arsenic, lead, iron and aluminum ions into its captive pores as 124, 216, 150 and 146 mg/g at pH 2, 4, 4 and 6, respectively. Moreover, most of the heavy metals were completely adsorbed from water (>99%) at pH ≥ 7. The provided findings indicated that the batch and columnar-adsorption designs maintained their functionality to effectively remove toxins even after multiple reuse/cycles, where the spent TiO2-banana cluster can be regenerated using NaOH and HClO4. The real toxin removal from the lake and tap water using TiO2-banana cluster adsorbent was assessed through the both proposed protocols (batch and column) under optimum pH conditions. In general, this study provides an applied-expandable and low-cost process for decontaminating water sources.
               
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