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Factors affecting the removal of selected heavy metals using a polymer immobilised sphagnum moss as a biosorbent

Factors affecting the removal of selected heavy metals using a polymer immobilised sphagnum moss as a biosorbent
Factors affecting the removal of selected heavy metals using a polymer immobilised sphagnum moss as a biosorbent
A hydrophilic polyurethane foam was used to immobilise dried sphagnum moss as a polymer/biomass matrix. This was then tested for its ability to remove Cu(II), Zn(II) and Pb(II) from aqueous solution. Further selected experiments using copper looked at factors which it was thought might affect the performance of the biosorbent.
The optimum pH for Cu(II) and Zn(H) sorption was found to be in the range 6 - 7, whilst Pb(II) showed a more uniform sorption profile over the pH range 3 - 8. At pH values above 8 there was significant leaching of organic components from the immobilisation matrix. The immobilised biomass maintained around 90% of its sorption capacity over 10 repetitive cycles of sorption/desorption using HCl as a desorbent with typically > 95% metal ion recovery from each cycle. There were no marked differences in the maximum sorption capacities for Cu(II) using different biomass particle sizes in the immobilisation matrix, but the affinity of the immobilised biomass for Cu(II) decreased with increasing particle size.
Alkali and alkaline-earth metal ions did not affect the heavy metal biosorption, but aluminium ion had a significant influence and itself could be adsorbed to a large extent. Acetic acid, urea, and carrageenan did not affect the maximum biosorption capacity of Cu(II), but carrageenan significantly reduced the affinity of biomass to metal ions probably as a result of its own biosorptive properties.
heavy metal, biosorption, sphagnum moss, polyurethane, inmobilisation
0959-3330
733-744
Zhang, Y.
69b11d32-d555-46e4-a333-88eee4628ae7
Banks, C.J.
5c6c8c4b-5b25-4e37-9058-50fa8d2e926f
Zhang, Y.
69b11d32-d555-46e4-a333-88eee4628ae7
Banks, C.J.
5c6c8c4b-5b25-4e37-9058-50fa8d2e926f

Zhang, Y. and Banks, C.J. (2005) Factors affecting the removal of selected heavy metals using a polymer immobilised sphagnum moss as a biosorbent. Environmental Technology, 26 (7), 733-744.

Record type: Article

Abstract

A hydrophilic polyurethane foam was used to immobilise dried sphagnum moss as a polymer/biomass matrix. This was then tested for its ability to remove Cu(II), Zn(II) and Pb(II) from aqueous solution. Further selected experiments using copper looked at factors which it was thought might affect the performance of the biosorbent.
The optimum pH for Cu(II) and Zn(H) sorption was found to be in the range 6 - 7, whilst Pb(II) showed a more uniform sorption profile over the pH range 3 - 8. At pH values above 8 there was significant leaching of organic components from the immobilisation matrix. The immobilised biomass maintained around 90% of its sorption capacity over 10 repetitive cycles of sorption/desorption using HCl as a desorbent with typically > 95% metal ion recovery from each cycle. There were no marked differences in the maximum sorption capacities for Cu(II) using different biomass particle sizes in the immobilisation matrix, but the affinity of the immobilised biomass for Cu(II) decreased with increasing particle size.
Alkali and alkaline-earth metal ions did not affect the heavy metal biosorption, but aluminium ion had a significant influence and itself could be adsorbed to a large extent. Acetic acid, urea, and carrageenan did not affect the maximum biosorption capacity of Cu(II), but carrageenan significantly reduced the affinity of biomass to metal ions probably as a result of its own biosorptive properties.

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Published date: 2005
Keywords: heavy metal, biosorption, sphagnum moss, polyurethane, inmobilisation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 39450
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/39450
ISSN: 0959-3330
PURE UUID: f4dcd297-8797-40d0-a9d1-c3f0fda7800c
ORCID for Y. Zhang: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5068-2260
ORCID for C.J. Banks: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6795-814X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 Jun 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:30

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