Phosphate removal from water using bottom ash: adsorption performance, coexisting anions and modelling studies
Author(s) -
Khalid Hashim,
Hind Mufeed Ewadh,
Adnan A. Muhsin,
Salah L. Zubaidi,
Patryk Kot,
Magomed Muradov,
Mohammed Hashim Aljefery,
Rafid Alkhaddar
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
water science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.406
H-Index - 137
eISSN - 1996-9732
pISSN - 0273-1223
DOI - 10.2166/wst.2020.561
Subject(s) - phosphate , adsorption , wastewater , chemistry , humic acid , environmental remediation , langmuir adsorption model , central composite design , portable water purification , water quality , water treatment , pulp and paper industry , nuclear chemistry , environmental chemistry , response surface methodology , environmental science , environmental engineering , chromatography , contamination , organic chemistry , ecology , fertilizer , engineering , biology
Phosphate in freshwater possesses significant effects on both quality of water and human health. Hence, many treatment methods have been used to remove phosphate from water/wastewaters, such as biological and electrochemical methods. Recent researches demonstrated that adsorption approaches are convenient solutions for water/wastewater remediation from phosphate. Thus, the present study employs industrial by-products (bottom ash (BA)), as a cost-effective and eco-friendly alternative, to remediate water from phosphate in the presence of competitor ions (humic acid). This study was initiated by characterising the chemical and physical properties of the BA, sample, then Central Composite Design (CCD) was utilised to design the required batch experiments and to model the influence of solution temperature (ST), humic acid concentration (HAC), pH of the solution (PoS) and doses of adsorbent (DoA) on the performance of the BA. The Langmuir model was utilised to assess the adsorption process. The outcomes of this study evidenced that the BA removed 83.8% of 5.0 mg/l of phosphates at ST, HAC, PoS and DoA 35 °C, 20 mg/L, 5 and 55 g/L, respectively. The isotherm study indicated a good affinity between BA and phosphate. Additionally, the developed model, using the CCD, reliably simulated the removal of phosphates using BA (R2 = 0.99).
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