Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
580023 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2010 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
A natural phosphate rock and two synthetic mesoporous hydroxyapatites were evaluated for the removal of pyridine and phenol from aqueous solutions. Experiments performed by the batch method showed that the sorption process occurs by a first order reaction for both pyridine and phenol. In contrast, the Freundlich model was able to describe sorption isotherms for phenol but not for pyridine. In parallel, the three apatites exhibit similar pyridine sorption capacities whereas phenol loading was in agreement with their respective specific surface area. This was attributed to the strong interaction arising between pyridine and apatite surface that hinders further inter-particular diffusion. This study suggests that, despite its low specific surface area, natural phosphate rock may be used as an efficient sorbent material for specific organic pollutants, with comparable efficiency and lower processing costs than some activated carbons.
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Authors
H.Bouyarmane H.Bouyarmane, S.El Asri, A. Rami, C. Roux, M.A. Mahly, A. Saoiabi, T. Coradin, A. Laghzizil,