Porous Alumosilicate Aggregate as Lead Ion Sorbent in Wastewater Treatments

Porous alumosilicate aggregate, namely perlite, was used as an alternative material in wastewater treatments for the selective removal of ionic pollutants such as lead which is present in industrial wastewaters and toxic at relatively low concentrations. Metal retention was investigated by single me...

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Main Authors: Andrea Petrella, Pinalysa Cosma, Vito Rizzi, Nicoletta De Vietro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-08-01
Series:Separations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2297-8739/4/3/25
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author Andrea Petrella
Pinalysa Cosma
Vito Rizzi
Nicoletta De Vietro
author_facet Andrea Petrella
Pinalysa Cosma
Vito Rizzi
Nicoletta De Vietro
author_sort Andrea Petrella
collection DOAJ
description Porous alumosilicate aggregate, namely perlite, was used as an alternative material in wastewater treatments for the selective removal of ionic pollutants such as lead which is present in industrial wastewaters and toxic at relatively low concentrations. Metal retention was investigated by single metals and multispecies equilibrium isotherms (batch system) and by carrying out dynamic (column) experiments. Lead ions were supposedly preferentially retained by ion exchange at the negatively charged silicate functional groups present on the perlite material, and to a minor extent by weak electrostatic (Van der Waals) interactions at non-specific functionalities. In the case of the batch system, the Freundlich isotherm gave a good correlation of the experimental data and lead maximum retention (qmax) in single ion solution was 4.28 mg/gperlite, and in multimetal solution was 1.50 mg/gperlite. In the case of the column system, overall capacity was 3.7 mg/gperlite in single ion solution, and in multimetal solution was 3.0 mg/gperlite. In multimetal solutions, lead ions showed the best interaction at the perlite functional groups because of the lowest free energies of hydration and hydrated radius. After sorption, perlite beads were used as lightweight aggregates for cement mortars after evaluation of the potential release of lead ions from the conglomerates.
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spelling doaj.art-9c7ceeea87184b2b94c6ecb58074809d2022-12-22T01:57:38ZengMDPI AGSeparations2297-87392017-08-01432510.3390/separations4030025separations4030025Porous Alumosilicate Aggregate as Lead Ion Sorbent in Wastewater TreatmentsAndrea Petrella0Pinalysa Cosma1Vito Rizzi2Nicoletta De Vietro3Dipartimento di Ingegneria Civile, Ambientale, Edile, del Territorio e di Chimica, Politecnico di Bari, Orabona, 4, 70125 Bari, ItalyDipartimento di Chimica, Università degli Studi di Bari “Aldo Moro”, Orabona, 4, 70125 Bari, ItalyDipartimento di Chimica, Università degli Studi di Bari “Aldo Moro”, Orabona, 4, 70125 Bari, ItalyDipartimento di Chimica, Università degli Studi di Bari “Aldo Moro”, Orabona, 4, 70125 Bari, ItalyPorous alumosilicate aggregate, namely perlite, was used as an alternative material in wastewater treatments for the selective removal of ionic pollutants such as lead which is present in industrial wastewaters and toxic at relatively low concentrations. Metal retention was investigated by single metals and multispecies equilibrium isotherms (batch system) and by carrying out dynamic (column) experiments. Lead ions were supposedly preferentially retained by ion exchange at the negatively charged silicate functional groups present on the perlite material, and to a minor extent by weak electrostatic (Van der Waals) interactions at non-specific functionalities. In the case of the batch system, the Freundlich isotherm gave a good correlation of the experimental data and lead maximum retention (qmax) in single ion solution was 4.28 mg/gperlite, and in multimetal solution was 1.50 mg/gperlite. In the case of the column system, overall capacity was 3.7 mg/gperlite in single ion solution, and in multimetal solution was 3.0 mg/gperlite. In multimetal solutions, lead ions showed the best interaction at the perlite functional groups because of the lowest free energies of hydration and hydrated radius. After sorption, perlite beads were used as lightweight aggregates for cement mortars after evaluation of the potential release of lead ions from the conglomerates.https://www.mdpi.com/2297-8739/4/3/25perlitelead ion retentionion exchangeFreundlich isothermmetal-laden materiallightweight mortars
spellingShingle Andrea Petrella
Pinalysa Cosma
Vito Rizzi
Nicoletta De Vietro
Porous Alumosilicate Aggregate as Lead Ion Sorbent in Wastewater Treatments
Separations
perlite
lead ion retention
ion exchange
Freundlich isotherm
metal-laden material
lightweight mortars
title Porous Alumosilicate Aggregate as Lead Ion Sorbent in Wastewater Treatments
title_full Porous Alumosilicate Aggregate as Lead Ion Sorbent in Wastewater Treatments
title_fullStr Porous Alumosilicate Aggregate as Lead Ion Sorbent in Wastewater Treatments
title_full_unstemmed Porous Alumosilicate Aggregate as Lead Ion Sorbent in Wastewater Treatments
title_short Porous Alumosilicate Aggregate as Lead Ion Sorbent in Wastewater Treatments
title_sort porous alumosilicate aggregate as lead ion sorbent in wastewater treatments
topic perlite
lead ion retention
ion exchange
Freundlich isotherm
metal-laden material
lightweight mortars
url https://www.mdpi.com/2297-8739/4/3/25
work_keys_str_mv AT andreapetrella porousalumosilicateaggregateasleadionsorbentinwastewatertreatments
AT pinalysacosma porousalumosilicateaggregateasleadionsorbentinwastewatertreatments
AT vitorizzi porousalumosilicateaggregateasleadionsorbentinwastewatertreatments
AT nicolettadevietro porousalumosilicateaggregateasleadionsorbentinwastewatertreatments