Litcius/Paper detail

Engineered pine nut shell derived activated carbons for improved removal of recalcitrant pharmaceuticals in urban wastewater treatment

Ana S. Mestre, R.M. C. Viegas, E. Mesquita, Maria João Rosa, Ana P. Carvalho

2022Journal of Hazardous Materials32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Novel powdered activated carbons (PACs) from pine cones and pine nut shells (PNSs) were tested for the competitive adsorption of pharmaceutical compounds (PhCs) in spiked (100 µg/L) secondary effluent and mixed liquor from an urban wastewater treatment plant. Steam activated PNS77, with hierarchical pore structure and 1463 m 2 /g of BET area, outperformed the commercial benchmark (WP220, mineral origin) for PhCs and dissolved organic matter (DOM) control. PNS77 attained the highest adsorption capacity and rate in synthetic and real wastewaters . Competitive adsorption isotherms revealed the detrimental effect of direct site competing DOM on PhC removal. The PhCs’ adsorbability increased with their hydrophobicity , regardless of the water matrix. Kinetic data allowed inferring that indirect competition due to pore constriction/blockage appeared to occur only in mixed liquor. Adsorption isotherm data modelling for ng/L range revealed 80 % removal of carbamazepine and diclofenac would be achieved dosing 8–15 mg/L PNS77 to secondary effluent, while for mixed liquor the dose must be doubled to balance the increased competition. Hydrophilic sulfamethoxazole required a higher dose (34–44 mg/L), lower in the mixed liquor. PNS77 hierarchical pore network and basic surface chemistry minimized DOM direct site competition, requiring lower doses in practical applications for wastewater treatment .

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryAdsorptionWastewaterEffluentPulp and paper industryBET theorySewage treatmentChromatographyNuclear chemistryChemical engineeringEnvironmental engineeringOrganic chemistryEnvironmental scienceEngineeringAdsorption and biosorption for pollutant removalPharmaceutical and Antibiotic Environmental ImpactsAnalytical chemistry methods development