Arsenic Removal Using Nanoscale Magnetite: Lab Scale to Pilot Scale
In response to its dangers, and its widespread occurrence globally, the problem of arsenic removal from water has attracted significant attention in the technical research community. Arsenic in water, in either the As(III) or As(V) state, exists as oxoanions which are large and polarizable; many of the conventional removal strategies for anion removal in waste water are best suited for hard ions and not easily adapted for arsenic.(Zheng, Goessler et al. 1998; Viraraghavan, Subramanian et al. 1999) More novel methods to directly address the arsenic problem have recently been proposed. These include the use of plants such as ferns to sequester arsenic from soils; muds and sands as materials for arsenic removal columns(Cheng, Van Geen et al. 2004); zero-valent iron as an in-situ treatment for arsenic(Kanel, Manning et al. 2005); and most relevant for this work, the use of mine tailings, which are predominantly iron oxide, as sorbents for treating contaminated sites. From this work, several important features of arsenic treatment systems emerge, including the disposal burden (gm As/kg sorbent) as well as the percent efficiency of As(III) and As(V) removal at various equilibrium arsenic concentrations. While each of these methods offers unique advantages, in particular the use of bulk sorbent materials requires the disposal of large masses of contaminated sorbent material loaded with relatively little arsenic and the use of ferric chloride fouls membranes and leaves large iron residuals in the water.
This project, coordinated by Tomson, Colvin and Li, has made considerable progress this year. The focus of the past year’s research is aimed at (1) modeling the kinetic and hysteretic adsorption/desorption of arsenic by nanomagnetite with a multi-reaction model; (2) enhanced adsorption of arsenic in the presence of Zn2+ and (3) scale-up of packed column treatment using nanoscale-magnetite in preparation for an on site, pilot scale demonstration in Guanajuato, Mexico.
Participating Researchers: