Arsenic Removal from Water Using Industrial By-Products
2013
Authors
Lekić, Branislava M.Markovic, Dana D.
Rajaković-Ognjanović, Vladana N.
Đukić, Aleksandar R.
Rajaković, Ljubinka V.
Article
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In this study, removal of arsenic ions using two industrial by-products as adsorbents is represented. Removal of As(III) and As(V) from water was carried out with industrial by-products: residual from the groundwater treatment process, iron-manganese oxide coated sand (IMOCS), and blast furnace slag from steel production (BFS), both inexpensive and locally available. In addition, the BFS was modified in order to minimise its deteriorating impact on the initial water quality. Kinetic and equilibrium studies were carried out using batch and fixed-bed column adsorption techniques under the conditions that are likely to occur in real water treatment systems. To evaluate the application for real groundwater treatment, the capacities of the selected materials were further compared to those exhibited by commercial sorbents, which were examined under the same experimental conditions. IMOCS was found to be a good and inexpensive sorbent for arsenic, while BFS and modified slag showed the highes...t affinity towards arsenic. All examined waste materials exhibited better sorption performances for As(V). The maximum sorption capacity in the batch reactor was obtained for blast furnace slag, 4040 mu gAs(V)/g.
Source:
Journal of Chemistry, 2013Funding / projects:
- Monitoring and Modeling of Rivers and Reservoirs (MORE) - Physical, Chemical, Biological and Morphodynamic Parameters (RS-MESTD-Technological Development (TD or TR)-37009)
- Urban Drainage Systems as Key Infrastructure in Cities and Towns (RS-MESTD-Technological Development (TD or TR)-37010)
DOI: 10.1155/2013/121024
ISSN: 2090-9063
WoS: 000324727700001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84884822122
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VinčaTY - JOUR AU - Lekić, Branislava M. AU - Markovic, Dana D. AU - Rajaković-Ognjanović, Vladana N. AU - Đukić, Aleksandar R. AU - Rajaković, Ljubinka V. PY - 2013 UR - https://vinar.vin.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5698 AB - In this study, removal of arsenic ions using two industrial by-products as adsorbents is represented. Removal of As(III) and As(V) from water was carried out with industrial by-products: residual from the groundwater treatment process, iron-manganese oxide coated sand (IMOCS), and blast furnace slag from steel production (BFS), both inexpensive and locally available. In addition, the BFS was modified in order to minimise its deteriorating impact on the initial water quality. Kinetic and equilibrium studies were carried out using batch and fixed-bed column adsorption techniques under the conditions that are likely to occur in real water treatment systems. To evaluate the application for real groundwater treatment, the capacities of the selected materials were further compared to those exhibited by commercial sorbents, which were examined under the same experimental conditions. IMOCS was found to be a good and inexpensive sorbent for arsenic, while BFS and modified slag showed the highest affinity towards arsenic. All examined waste materials exhibited better sorption performances for As(V). The maximum sorption capacity in the batch reactor was obtained for blast furnace slag, 4040 mu gAs(V)/g. T2 - Journal of Chemistry T1 - Arsenic Removal from Water Using Industrial By-Products DO - 10.1155/2013/121024 ER -
@article{ author = "Lekić, Branislava M. and Markovic, Dana D. and Rajaković-Ognjanović, Vladana N. and Đukić, Aleksandar R. and Rajaković, Ljubinka V.", year = "2013", abstract = "In this study, removal of arsenic ions using two industrial by-products as adsorbents is represented. Removal of As(III) and As(V) from water was carried out with industrial by-products: residual from the groundwater treatment process, iron-manganese oxide coated sand (IMOCS), and blast furnace slag from steel production (BFS), both inexpensive and locally available. In addition, the BFS was modified in order to minimise its deteriorating impact on the initial water quality. Kinetic and equilibrium studies were carried out using batch and fixed-bed column adsorption techniques under the conditions that are likely to occur in real water treatment systems. To evaluate the application for real groundwater treatment, the capacities of the selected materials were further compared to those exhibited by commercial sorbents, which were examined under the same experimental conditions. IMOCS was found to be a good and inexpensive sorbent for arsenic, while BFS and modified slag showed the highest affinity towards arsenic. All examined waste materials exhibited better sorption performances for As(V). The maximum sorption capacity in the batch reactor was obtained for blast furnace slag, 4040 mu gAs(V)/g.", journal = "Journal of Chemistry", title = "Arsenic Removal from Water Using Industrial By-Products", doi = "10.1155/2013/121024" }
Lekić, B. M., Markovic, D. D., Rajaković-Ognjanović, V. N., Đukić, A. R.,& Rajaković, L. V.. (2013). Arsenic Removal from Water Using Industrial By-Products. in Journal of Chemistry. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/121024
Lekić BM, Markovic DD, Rajaković-Ognjanović VN, Đukić AR, Rajaković LV. Arsenic Removal from Water Using Industrial By-Products. in Journal of Chemistry. 2013;. doi:10.1155/2013/121024 .
Lekić, Branislava M., Markovic, Dana D., Rajaković-Ognjanović, Vladana N., Đukić, Aleksandar R., Rajaković, Ljubinka V., "Arsenic Removal from Water Using Industrial By-Products" in Journal of Chemistry (2013), https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/121024 . .