| Literature DB >> 28122277 |
Haruko Hase1, Toru Nishiuchi1, Tsutomu Sato2, Tsubasa Otake3, Tsuyoshi Yaita4, Tohru Kobayashi4, Tetsuro Yoneda3.
Abstract
Heavy metals contained in wastewater are generally removed by adding antalkaline to increase the pH, and Ni is commonly precipitated as Ni-hydroxides at pH 10. However, a more sustainable remediation method of treatment at neutral conditions would be attractive due to the high cost of chemical reagents and inefficient treatment at present. Based on natural attenuation, the method of adding Al ions has been used in wastewater treatment to precipitate layered double hydroxides (LDH). Here, we investigated the use of Al ion addition in the Ni containing wastewater treatment, experimentally and thermodynamically. By co-precipitation experiments adding Al ions to Ni-containing water, Ni was selectively incorporated into the structure of LDH, and the removal efficiency of Ni was close to 100% even in pH 7 and 8 samples (lower pH than conventional methods) with initial Ni concentrations of 200-10,000mg/L. Geochemical modeling results replicate the experimental results well when the Al/Ni ratio of LDH is assumed to be 0.33. This model makes it possible to estimate the amount of Al ions and additive agents necessary for use in treatment of wastewater containing different Ni concentrations.Entities:
Keywords: Aluminum; Geochemical modeling; Layered double hydroxide; Nickel; Wastewater treatment
Year: 2017 PMID: 28122277 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2017.01.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588