| Literature DB >> 25310885 |
Simon Kizito1, Shubiao Wu2, W Kipkemoi Kirui1, Ming Lei3, Qimin Lu1, Hamidou Bah1, Renjie Dong1.
Abstract
Due to its high adsorption capacity, the use of biochar to capture excess nutrients from wastewater has become a central focus in environmental remediation studies. In this study, its potential use in adsorption and removal of ammonium in piggery manure anaerobic digestate slurry was investigated. The adsorbed amount of NH4(+)-N (mg·g(-1)) and removal percentage as a function of adsorbent mass in solution, adsorbent particle size, NH4(+)-N concentration in the effluent, contact time, pH and temperature were quantified in batch equilibrium and kinetics experiments. The maximum NH4(+)-N adsorption from slurry at 1400 mgN·L(-1) was 44.64 ± 0.602 mg·g(-1) and 39.8 ± 0.54 mg·g(-1) for wood and rice husk biochar, respectively. For both biochars, adsorption increased with increase in contact time, temperature, pH and NH4(+)-N concentration but it decreased with increase in biochar particle size. Furthermore, the sorption process was endothermic and followed Langmuir (R(2)=0.995 and 0.998) and Pseudo-second order kinetic models (R(2)=0.998 and 0.999). Based on the removal amounts, we concluded that rice husk and wood biochar have potential to adsorb NH4(+)-N from piggery manure anaerobic digestate slurry, and thus can be used as nutrient filters prior to discharge into water streams.Entities:
Keywords: Ammonium adsorption; Biochar; Kinetics; Piggery manure anaerobic digestate; Thermodynamics
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25310885 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.09.096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963