| Literature DB >> 28788501 |
Chiharu Tokoro1, Shinya Suzuki2, Daisuke Haraguchi3, Sayaka Izawa4.
Abstract
The removal mechanisms of silicate using an aluminum hydroxide co-precipitation process was investigated and compared with an adsorption process, in order to establish an effective and validated method for silicate removal from wastewater. Adsorption isotherms, XRD and FT-IR analyses showed that silicate uptake occurred by adsorption to boehmite for initial Si/Al molar ratios smaller than two, but by precipitation of poorly crystalline kaolinite for the ratios larger than two, in both co-precipitation and adsorption processes. Silicate was removed by two steps: (i) an initial rapid uptake in a few seconds; and (ii) a slow uptake over several hours in both processes. The uptake rate in the first step was higher in the co-precipitation process than in adsorption process, presumably due to increased silicate adsorption to boehmite and rapid precipitation of kaolinite. These results suggest that silicate removal using aluminum salts could be effectively achieved if the pH adjustment and aluminum concentration are strictly controlled.Entities:
Keywords: adsorption; aluminum hydroxide; boehmite; co-precipitation; kaolinite; sorption density
Year: 2014 PMID: 28788501 PMCID: PMC5453091 DOI: 10.3390/ma7021084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1.Silicate removal by co-precipitation and adsorption. Solid or dashed lines are calculated values considering the chemical equilibrium of kaolinite formation. The initial silicate concentration was either 0.71 or 1.78 mmol·dm−3.
Figure 2.Sorption isotherm obtained from co-precipitation and adsorption experiments at pH 9. The initial silicate concentration was either 0.71 or 1.78 mmol·dm−3.
Figure 3.XRD spectra of silicate co-precipitated residues obtained at pH 9. The initial aluminum concentration was 1.48 mmol·dm−3.
Figure 4.XRD spectra of silicate adsorbed residues obtained at pH 9. The initial aluminum concentration was 1.48 mmol·dm−3.
Figure 5.FT-IR spectra of silicate co-precipitated residues at pH 9 at an initial aluminum concentration of 1.48 mmol·dm−3.
Figure 6.FT-IR spectra of silicate adsorbed residues at pH 9 at an initial aluminum concentration of 1.48 mmol·dm−3.
Peak assignments in the residue FT-IR spectra.
| Band location (cm−1) | Band assignments | Band interaction |
|---|---|---|
| 3650 | −OH | bend |
| 3600 | −OH | stretch |
| 1650 | H2O | stretch |
| 1350 | NO3−, Al−OH | stretch and bond |
| 1105 | Si−O | stretch |
| 1080 | AlOOH | stretch |
| 1025 | Si−O | stretch |
| 700 | Al–O–Si | stretch |
| 600 | AlO6 | stretch and bond |
| 432 | Si–O | stretch |
Figure 7.Residual silicate concentration in co-precipitation and adsorption experiments at pH 9 over 24 h. The initial silicate concentration was 1.78 mmol·dm−3.
Figure 8.Residual aluminum concentration in co-precipitation and adsorption experiments at pH 9 over 24 h: initial silicate concentration was 1.78 mmol·dm−3.