| Literature DB >> 27318734 |
Hanna Runtti1, Tero Luukkonen2, Mikko Niskanen1, Sari Tuomikoski1, Teija Kangas1, Pekka Tynjälä3, Emma-Tuulia Tolonen4, Minna Sarkkinen2, Kimmo Kemppainen2, Jaakko Rämö1, Ulla Lassi5.
Abstract
Blast-furnace slag and metakaolin were geopolymerised, modified with barium or treated with a combination of these methods in order to obtain an efficient SO4(2-) sorbent for mine water treatment. Of prepared materials, barium-modified blast-furnace slag geopolymer (Ba-BFS-GP) exhibited the highest SO4(2-) maximum sorption capacity (up to 119mgg(-1)) and it compared also favourably to materials reported in the literature. Therefore, Ba-BFS-GP was selected for further studies and the factors affecting to the sorption efficiency were assessed. Several isotherms were applied to describe the experimental results of Ba-BFS-GP and the Sips model showed the best fit. Kinetic studies showed that the sorption process follows the pseudo-second-order kinetics. In the dynamic removal experiments with columns, total SO4(2-) removal was observed initially when treating mine effluent. The novel modification method of geopolymer material proved to be technically suitable in achieving extremely low concentrations of SO4(2-) (<2mgL(-1)) in mine effluents.Entities:
Keywords: Adsorption; Blast-furnace slag; Geopolymer; Metakaolin; Sulphate
Year: 2016 PMID: 27318734 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2016.06.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588