A Physicochemical Study of Al(+3) Interactions with Edible Seaweed Biomass in Acidic Waters
A Physicochemical Study of Al(+3) Interactions with Edible Seaweed Biomass in Acidic Waters
In this article, a study of the Al(+3) interactions in acidic waters with biomass of different edible seaweeds: brown (Fucus vesiculosus, Saccorhiza polyschides), red (Mastocarpus stellatus, Gelidium sesquipedale, Chondrus crispus), and green (Ulva rigida, Codium tomentosum), has been performed. The influence of both, the initial concentration of metal and the solution pH, on the Al-uptake capacity of the biomass has been analyzed. From preliminary tests, species Fucus vesiculosus and Gelidium sesquipedale have been selected for a more exhaustive analysis. Sorption kinetic studies demonstrated that 60 min are enough to reach equilibrium. The intraparticle diffusion model has been used to describe kinetic data. Equilibrium studies have been carried out at pH values of 1, 2.5, and 4. Langmuir isotherms showed that the best uptake values, obtained at pH 4, were 33 mg/g for F. vesiculosus and 9.2 mg/g for G. sesquipedale. These edible seaweeds have been found particularly effective in binding aluminum metal ions for most of the conditions tested. Physicochemical data reported at these low pH values could be of interest, not only in modeling aluminum-containing antacids-food pharmacokinetic processes produced in the stomach (pH values 1 to 3) but in remediation studies in acidic waters. Practical Application: Aluminum is thought to be linked to neurological disruptions such as Alzheimer's disease. In this article, the adsorption ability of different types of edible seaweeds toward aluminum has been studied. The choice of low pH values is due to the fact that stomach region is acidic with a pH value between 1 and 3 as a consequence of hydrochloric secretion; so physicochemical data reported in this study could be of interest in modeling drugfood interactions, in particular those referring to aluminum-containing antacids-food pharmacokinetic processes produced in the gastrointestinal tract.
adsorption, aluminum, edible seaweed, kinetics, pysicochemical properties
C987-C993
Lodeiro, Pablo
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Lopez-Garcia, Marta
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Herrero, Luz
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Barriada, Jose L.
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Herrero, Roberto
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Cremades, Javier
29eb0127-d09b-4567-89b5-4e4854c9fed1
Barbara, Ignacio
ef677afa-c599-429c-96e8-c79885139365
Sastre de Vicente, Manuel E.
8b7b6889-35e4-45aa-adb7-c8124dad5938
September 2012
Lodeiro, Pablo
f6c1011a-06d0-4095-bc45-2e15e9e492d0
Lopez-Garcia, Marta
05de4bce-a426-4ae2-bf9b-28c26a873702
Herrero, Luz
e16bc5bd-7f63-465d-b84c-b6bca9adeddf
Barriada, Jose L.
dd613ea4-adeb-47b0-aae4-87a3e200a9d7
Herrero, Roberto
083bf72e-e314-4edb-86a0-9ba61f35a816
Cremades, Javier
29eb0127-d09b-4567-89b5-4e4854c9fed1
Barbara, Ignacio
ef677afa-c599-429c-96e8-c79885139365
Sastre de Vicente, Manuel E.
8b7b6889-35e4-45aa-adb7-c8124dad5938
Lodeiro, Pablo, Lopez-Garcia, Marta, Herrero, Luz, Barriada, Jose L., Herrero, Roberto, Cremades, Javier, Barbara, Ignacio and Sastre de Vicente, Manuel E.
(2012)
A Physicochemical Study of Al(+3) Interactions with Edible Seaweed Biomass in Acidic Waters.
Journal of Food Science, 77 (9), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1750-3841.2012.02855.x).
Abstract
In this article, a study of the Al(+3) interactions in acidic waters with biomass of different edible seaweeds: brown (Fucus vesiculosus, Saccorhiza polyschides), red (Mastocarpus stellatus, Gelidium sesquipedale, Chondrus crispus), and green (Ulva rigida, Codium tomentosum), has been performed. The influence of both, the initial concentration of metal and the solution pH, on the Al-uptake capacity of the biomass has been analyzed. From preliminary tests, species Fucus vesiculosus and Gelidium sesquipedale have been selected for a more exhaustive analysis. Sorption kinetic studies demonstrated that 60 min are enough to reach equilibrium. The intraparticle diffusion model has been used to describe kinetic data. Equilibrium studies have been carried out at pH values of 1, 2.5, and 4. Langmuir isotherms showed that the best uptake values, obtained at pH 4, were 33 mg/g for F. vesiculosus and 9.2 mg/g for G. sesquipedale. These edible seaweeds have been found particularly effective in binding aluminum metal ions for most of the conditions tested. Physicochemical data reported at these low pH values could be of interest, not only in modeling aluminum-containing antacids-food pharmacokinetic processes produced in the stomach (pH values 1 to 3) but in remediation studies in acidic waters. Practical Application: Aluminum is thought to be linked to neurological disruptions such as Alzheimer's disease. In this article, the adsorption ability of different types of edible seaweeds toward aluminum has been studied. The choice of low pH values is due to the fact that stomach region is acidic with a pH value between 1 and 3 as a consequence of hydrochloric secretion; so physicochemical data reported in this study could be of interest in modeling drugfood interactions, in particular those referring to aluminum-containing antacids-food pharmacokinetic processes produced in the gastrointestinal tract.
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Published date: September 2012
Keywords:
adsorption, aluminum, edible seaweed, kinetics, pysicochemical properties
Organisations:
Ocean Biochemistry & Ecosystems
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Local EPrints ID: 354083
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/354083
ISSN: 1750-3841
PURE UUID: 0c3d0a07-5c58-4379-b547-cc7e1577e749
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Date deposited: 28 Jun 2013 15:24
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 14:13
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Contributors
Author:
Pablo Lodeiro
Author:
Marta Lopez-Garcia
Author:
Luz Herrero
Author:
Jose L. Barriada
Author:
Roberto Herrero
Author:
Javier Cremades
Author:
Ignacio Barbara
Author:
Manuel E. Sastre de Vicente
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