Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4481774 Water Research 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The adsorbent is an alumina-coated magnetite nanoparticles with sulfate doping on the surface.•The adsorption capacity of the adsorbent for fluoride was calculated as 70.4 mg/g.•This nanoadsorbent with high pHPZC performed well over a considerable wide pH range of 4–10.

A novel adsorbent of sulfate-doped Fe3O4/Al2O3 nanoparticles with magnetic separability was developed for fluoride removal from drinking water. The nanosized adsorbent was characterized and its performance in fluoride removal was evaluated. Kinetic data reveal that the fluoride adsorption was rapid in the beginning followed by a slower adsorption process, nearly 90% adsorption can be achieved within 20 min and only 10–15% additional removal occurred in the following 8 h. The fluoride adsorption isotherm was well described by Elovich model. The calculated adsorption capacity of this nanoadsorbent for fluoride by two-site Langmuir model was 70.4 mg/g at pH 7.0. Moreover, this nanoadsorbent performed well over a considerable wide pH range of 4–10, and the fluoride removal efficiencies reached up to 90% and 70% throughout the pH range of 4–10 with initial fluoride concentrations of 10 mg/L and 50 mg/L, respectively. The observed sulfate–fluoride displacement and decreased sulfur content on the adsorbent surface reveal that anion exchange process was an important mechanism for fluoride adsorption by the sulfate-doped Fe3O4/Al2O3 nanoparticles. Moreover, a shift of the pH of zero point charge (pHPZC) of the nanoparticles and surface analysis based on X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) suggest the formation of inner-sphere fluoride complex at the aluminum center as another adsorption mechanism. With the exception of PO43−, other co-existing anions (NO3−, Cl− and SO42−) did not evidently inhibit fluoride removal by the nanoparticles. Findings of this study demonstrate the potential utility of the nanoparticles as an effective adsorbent for fluoride removal from drinking water.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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