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Interactions of cadmium(II) and protons with dead biomass of marine algae Fucus sp.

Interactions of cadmium(II) and protons with dead biomass of marine algae Fucus sp.
Interactions of cadmium(II) and protons with dead biomass of marine algae Fucus sp.
Samples of dead biomass from the marine brown algae Fucus ceranoides, Fucus vesiculosus and Fucus serratus were studied for their ability to remove cadmium from aqueous solutions. The metal sorption process is rapid, with 90\% of the metal uptake completed within the first 25 min of contact. The kinetic data was described successfully by a pseudo second order chemical sorption process with rate constants of ca. 0.6 g mmol(-1) min(-1). At pH 4.5, the raw biomass of the three species exhibited equilibrium uptake capacities for Cd as high as 0.8 mmol g(-1) (90 mg g(-1)), on a dry weight basis, without chemical pretreatment. These sorption capacities are much higher than those reported for activated carbon and chitin. The sorption of Cd was found to increase as pH increases, reaching a plateau at pH 5. Batch sorption experiments and continuous potentiometric titrations of acid-treated biomass samples in 0.05 M NaNO3 were used to derive thermodynamic binding parameters according to the NICCA model. The total amount of acid sites was 2.4-2.9 mmol g(-1), with median values of the affinity distribution for protons and cadmium ions, 109 K-H and log K-Cd, of 3.7 and 2.69, respectively (conditional values). The apparent heterogeneity of the sorbent was successfully taken into account by the empirical NICCA isotherm, which described very well the competition between protons and metal ions, in contrast with a simpler discrete competitive Langmuir model. The experimental results demonstrate that these seaweeds constitute a promising, efficient, cheap and biodegradable sorbent biomaterial for cadmium removal from wastewaters. This use would represent an example of exploitation of a renewable marine resource in water treatment technologies for the prevention of heavy metal pollution in the environment.
biosorption, wastewater treatment, heavy metals, marine algae, potentiometric titration, voltammetry
0304-4203
106-116
Herrero, R.
ee7f0139-d8ac-4084-a73e-5eaa91b2e29a
Cordero, B.
a78cfae4-333c-4173-be50-1f662f8d05bb
Lodeiro, P.
2a3db327-ecb7-4c32-bc61-13e01aed7182
Rey-Castro, C.
1c26884f-0c33-40c4-b97b-111e7ec26fd7
Sastre de Vicente, M.E.
2bd016ef-20cf-4fb4-9282-1ca22142bcb4
Herrero, R.
ee7f0139-d8ac-4084-a73e-5eaa91b2e29a
Cordero, B.
a78cfae4-333c-4173-be50-1f662f8d05bb
Lodeiro, P.
2a3db327-ecb7-4c32-bc61-13e01aed7182
Rey-Castro, C.
1c26884f-0c33-40c4-b97b-111e7ec26fd7
Sastre de Vicente, M.E.
2bd016ef-20cf-4fb4-9282-1ca22142bcb4

Herrero, R., Cordero, B., Lodeiro, P., Rey-Castro, C. and Sastre de Vicente, M.E. (2006) Interactions of cadmium(II) and protons with dead biomass of marine algae Fucus sp. Marine Chemistry, 99 (1-4), 106-116. (doi:10.1016/j.marchem.2005.05.009).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Samples of dead biomass from the marine brown algae Fucus ceranoides, Fucus vesiculosus and Fucus serratus were studied for their ability to remove cadmium from aqueous solutions. The metal sorption process is rapid, with 90\% of the metal uptake completed within the first 25 min of contact. The kinetic data was described successfully by a pseudo second order chemical sorption process with rate constants of ca. 0.6 g mmol(-1) min(-1). At pH 4.5, the raw biomass of the three species exhibited equilibrium uptake capacities for Cd as high as 0.8 mmol g(-1) (90 mg g(-1)), on a dry weight basis, without chemical pretreatment. These sorption capacities are much higher than those reported for activated carbon and chitin. The sorption of Cd was found to increase as pH increases, reaching a plateau at pH 5. Batch sorption experiments and continuous potentiometric titrations of acid-treated biomass samples in 0.05 M NaNO3 were used to derive thermodynamic binding parameters according to the NICCA model. The total amount of acid sites was 2.4-2.9 mmol g(-1), with median values of the affinity distribution for protons and cadmium ions, 109 K-H and log K-Cd, of 3.7 and 2.69, respectively (conditional values). The apparent heterogeneity of the sorbent was successfully taken into account by the empirical NICCA isotherm, which described very well the competition between protons and metal ions, in contrast with a simpler discrete competitive Langmuir model. The experimental results demonstrate that these seaweeds constitute a promising, efficient, cheap and biodegradable sorbent biomaterial for cadmium removal from wastewaters. This use would represent an example of exploitation of a renewable marine resource in water treatment technologies for the prevention of heavy metal pollution in the environment.

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More information

Published date: 6 March 2006
Additional Information: Mediterranean Conference on Chemistry of Aquatic Systems, Reggio Calabria, ITALY, SEP, 2004
Keywords: biosorption, wastewater treatment, heavy metals, marine algae, potentiometric titration, voltammetry
Organisations: Ocean Biochemistry & Ecosystems

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 355097
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/355097
ISSN: 0304-4203
PURE UUID: 29f2b380-c752-4373-b4cc-50c7012f779f

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Date deposited: 30 Jul 2013 10:00
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 14:29

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Contributors

Author: R. Herrero
Author: B. Cordero
Author: P. Lodeiro
Author: C. Rey-Castro
Author: M.E. Sastre de Vicente

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