Chemosphere | 2021

Removal of ammonium, phosphate, and sulfonamide antibiotics using alum sludge and low-grade charcoal pellets.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Powder adsorbents perform well due to their large surface area but are difficult to use because of aggregation and channeling. In this study, pelletization of adsorbents was proposed as a solution to these operating problems. A three-component mixture was extruded into pellets and calcined under air or nitrogen conditions The pellet adsorbent removed 47, 71, 97, and 72% of ammonium, phosphate, sulfathiazole, and sulfamethoxazole, respectively. Bentonite improved greatly the strength of pellets, and a 10\xa0wt% of bentonite was sufficient to maintain pellet shape and mass. No significant difference in individual adsorption and multi-pollutant adsorption was found. Pellet adsorbents with alum sludge, bentonite, and low-grade charcoal are low-cost materials that effectively remove multi-pollutants from the aqueous phase.

Volume 281
Pages \n 130960\n
DOI 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.130960
Language English
Journal Chemosphere

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