Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4410345 | Chemosphere | 2011 | 6 Pages |
The article presents a new approach that can be used for the purification of water contaminated by heavy metals. The treatment of peat with microalgae showed to be an effective way of increasing metal uptake by peat. Metal sorption was studied for a multimetal solution containing Cu, Cd, Ni, Zn, Cd, and Pb. Cu and Pb were found to be the metals having the highest affinity to peat. Water hardness has a strong effect on the uptake of borderline metals (Cd, Ni, Zn, Cd) from a solution. The use of algae for peat treatment resulted in less time to reach an equilibrium (24 h vs. 72 h for pure peat), and the effect of water hardness (Ca2+) on metal uptake was considerably reduced. Both peat and algal-treated peat were able to take up metals from rather acidic solutions (pH 3.0). pH had less influence on the metal uptake compared with water hardness. The affinity of heavy metals to peat was the following: Pb > Cu > Ni > Cd > Zn > Co. It slightly changed to Pb > Cu > Ni > Cd ≈ Co ≈ Zn when the combined sorbent, peat treated with microalga, was applied.
► Algae treatment increase uptake rate of metals by peat. ► Metal sorption by peat is unaffected by pH at interval 3.0–4.5. ► Uptake of Cu and Pb by peat is independent on water hardness. ► Microalgal treatment of peat partly eliminate the negative effect of Ca on metal sorption.