Litcius/Paper detail

Low cost nanoparticles derived from nitrogen fertilizer industry waste for the remediation of copper contaminated soil and water

Elsayed A. Elkhatib, Mohamed L. Moharem, Ayman Mahmoud

2020Environmental Engineering Research18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The goal of this study was to produce a novel nano-scale material from nitrogen fertilizer industry byproduct (nNFIB) and assess its capability to remediate Cu contaminated wastewater and soil. The novel nNFIB was produced using planetary mono mill and characterized. Equilibrium and kinetics studies of Cu sorption by nNFIB were performed in batch system. The effects of a variety of factors, including pH, coexisting ions and adsorption time on Cu adsorption were investigated. Furthermore, Cu sequestration mechanism onto nNFIB was investigated using sequential extraction technique and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra before and after nNFIB adsorption. The Cu sorption equilibrium and kinetics data were successfully described by Langmuir and first-order models, respectively. The calculated maximum Cu(II) adsorption capacity (qmax) of nNFIB (100 mg g−1) was four times higher than qmax of bulk NFIB. Copper removal by nNFIB was quite fast (around 86%) in the first 5 min and gradually slowed down until achieved 100% removal at equilibrium time. The FTIR spectra and Cu fractionation data in biosolid-amended soil demonstrated that Cu sequestration in contaminated water and soil is strongly related to CaCO3 of nNFIB. The overall findings show the potential use of nNFIB as a best management practice for Cu removal from wastewater and Cu stabilization in contaminated biosolid-amended soils.

Topics & Concepts

SorptionEnvironmental remediationAdsorptionCopperLangmuir adsorption modelSoil waterWastewaterChemistryEnvironmental chemistryFertilizerFractionationFourier transform infrared spectroscopyContaminationEnvironmental engineeringEnvironmental scienceChemical engineeringSoil scienceChromatographyEngineeringEcologyBiologyOrganic chemistryAdsorption and biosorption for pollutant removalHeavy metals in environmentEnvironmental remediation with nanomaterials