Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
582068 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Dihydrogenarsenate [H2AsO4â, As(V)] or dichromate [Cr2O72â, Cr(VI)] at pH = 4.0 showed to be sorbed on a Fe(OH)x-polymerin complex and ferrihydrite to a greater extent than on polymerin, the organic polymeric fraction of olive oil mill wastewater (OMW). In particular, the maximum amount (xm) of arsenate sorbed on Fe(OH)x-polymerin complex was similar to that on ferrihydrite (880.26 and 743.02 mmol kgâ1, respectively), and was much greater than that sorbed on polymerin (384.25 mmol kgâ1). The sorption of dichromate was to a comparable extent on Fe(OH)x-polymerin complex and ferrihydrite (205.90 and 254.88 mmol kgâ1, respectively). Cr(III), a less toxic chromium form, mainly, and Cr(V) were indeed the effective forms sorbed on polymerin (200 mmol kgâ1), as a consequence of the redox reaction of the strongly toxic Cr(VI) with the CH2OH groups of the polysaccharide moiety of this bio-sorbent, according to the data deriving from XPS and DRIFT analyses. The potential exploitation of the selected sorbents for the removal of As(V) or Cr(VI) from aqueous effluents is briefly discussed.
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Authors
F. Sannino, A. De Martino, M. Pigna, A. Violante, P. Di Leo, E. Mesto, R. Capasso,