Mechanism evolution and prediction of carbamazepine sorption by mangrove plant residue-derived biochars

J Environ Qual. 2022 Jul;51(4):745-754. doi: 10.1002/jeq2.20359. Epub 2022 May 25.

Abstract

A mechanism for carbamazepine (CBZ) sorption by mangrove plant residue-derived biochars pyrolyzed at 200-700 °C (referred as MPR200-MPR700) was elucidated in this study. The experimental results demonstrated that the dominant sorption mechanism of biochars for CBZ was evolved from partition to adsorption with increasing pyrolysis temperature. The CBZ concentration-dependent contributions of partition and adsorption were controlled by the relative noncarbonized and carbonized fractions of biochars. The partition medium changed from a polymeric aliphatic fraction (mangrove plant residue [MPR]200-MPR400) to a more condensed aromatic phase (MPR500-MPR600), which made the partition less favorable. Meanwhile, the adsorption was selectively regulated by polarity (MPR200-MPR300) and porosity (MPR400-MPR700) for different biochars. A pragmatic model including the sorbent aromaticity index (H/C) was put forward to predict CBZ sorption to MPR200-MPR700 and other carbonaceous materials reported in the literature. The findings can be helpful in understanding CBZ-biochar interactions and developing effective sorbents (such as biochars) for pollutant sequestration.

MeSH terms

  • Adsorption
  • Carbamazepine*
  • Charcoal* / chemistry
  • Temperature

Substances

  • biochar
  • Charcoal
  • Carbamazepine