Litcius/Paper detail

Selective and Efficient Phosphate Removal Using Ca–La Layered Double Hydroxide-Functionalized Sludge Biochar

Fanglian He, Yuhang Cao, Yonggang Wu, Hang Chen, Fu Huang, Ming Chang, Chaohai Wei, Guanglei Qiu

2024ACS ES&T Water14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Effective and sustainable removal of low-concentration phosphate is imperative but challenging for advanced wastewater treatment. Additionally, an eco-friendly and cost-effective treatment and reuse of waste activated sludge is critical. To address these problems, sludge-biochar-based phosphate adsorbents were developed by pyrolyzing waste activated sludge and then functionalizing with Ca–La layered double hydroxide (LDH). The LDH’s structure and adsorption characteristics were optimized by substituting the intercalated ion CO 3 2– with NO 3 – . A maximal phosphorus adsorption capacity of 78.24 mg of P/g was achieved. Adsorption kinetics showed that 0.2 g/L functionalized sludge biochar effectively lowered PO 4 3– –P concentration from 7.0 to <0.02 mg/L within 2 h. The functionalized sludge biochar showed desirable phosphate (7 mg/L) selectivity toward coexisting anions such as sulfate (120 mg/L) and carbonate (250 mg/L), resulting in barely impacted adsorption capabilities. After 4 repetitive adsorption-regeneration experiments, 65.1% adsorption capacity remained. The functionalized sludge biochar was used to remove phosphate from a local wastewater treatment plant. The PO 4 3– –P concentration effectively decreased from 1.29 to <0.02 mg/L within 1 h. The promising selectivity and stability of the functionalized sludge biochar are due mostly to selective chemisorption, ion exchange, and phosphate complexation in the inner layer.

Topics & Concepts

BiocharPhosphateHydroxideChemistryLayered double hydroxidesNuclear chemistryPulp and paper industryChemical engineeringEnvironmental chemistryInorganic chemistryOrganic chemistryPyrolysisEngineeringPhosphorus and nutrient managementLayered Double Hydroxides Synthesis and ApplicationsEsophageal and GI Pathology