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Surface Complexation and Packed Bed Mass Transport Models Enable Adsorbent Design for Arsenate and Vanadate Removal. | LitMetric

Surface Complexation and Packed Bed Mass Transport Models Enable Adsorbent Design for Arsenate and Vanadate Removal.

ACS ES T Eng

School of Sustainable Engineering & the Built Environment, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287, United States of America.

Published: October 2024


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Article Abstract

Co-occurrence of metal oxo-anions (e.g., arsenate) in drinking water pose human health risks. To understand and predict competition and breakthrough for individual or mixtures of oxo-anions in continuous-flow packed bed adsorption systems, we linked equilibrium surface complexation models (SCMs) with a Pore Surface Diffusion Model (PSDM). After parameterization using data for two commercial adsorbents, the SCM and PSDM predicted well the adsorption isotherm data and column breakthrough curves, respectively, for single-solute (arsenate) and bi-solute water chemistries (arsenate, vanadate) as well as chromatographic displacement of previously adsorbed arsenate by vanadate. Surface- and pore- diffusivities for both commercial adsorbents were 3.0 to 3.5 x10 cm/s and 1.1 to 0.8 x10 cm/s, respectively. After validation, the SCM+PSDM was used to evaluate adsorbent media characteristics, variable water chemistries, and reactor configurations. When contrasting hypothetical crystalline versus amorphous metal (hydr)oxide adsorbents, increasing surface site density resulted in higher Freundlich isotherm capacity (K) but didn't impact 1/n. Increasing surface binding affinities beneficially impacted both K and 1/n isotherm and would improve performance of point-of-use (POU) adsorbent system applications. simulation results suggest prioritizing enhancing adsorbent capacity (q) through improved surface reactivity in the design of new POU adsorbent materials rather than focusing on reducing mass transport limitations through intraparticle pore design. For municipal-scale adsorption systems, the PSDM simulation of the mass transfer zone shape was evaluated for hypothetical adsorbent pore designs (i.e., intraparticle porosity (ε) and tortuosity) and demonstrated that ε control was a key strategy to improve performance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11698511PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsestengg.4c00315DOI Listing

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