[Phosphorus Adsorption in Water and Immobilization in Sediments by Lanthanum-modified Water Treatment Sludge Hydrochar]

Huan Jing Ke Xue. 2023 Jun 8;44(6):3288-3300. doi: 10.13227/j.hjkx.202207114.
[Article in Chinese]

Abstract

Using water treatment sludge and lanthanum chloride as raw materials, lanthanum-modified water treatment sludge hydrothermal carbon was prepared through one-step hydrothermal carbonization and loading lanthanum. SEM-EDS, BET, FTIR, XRD, and XPS were used to characterize the materials. The initial pH of the solution, adsorption time, adsorption isotherm, and adsorption kinetics were investigated to study the adsorption characteristics of phosphorus in water. The results showed that the specific surface area, the pore volume, and the pore size of the prepared materials were significantly increased, and the phosphorus adsorption capacity was greatly improved compared with that of the water treatment sludge. The adsorption process conformed to the pseudo-second-order kinetic model, and the Langmuir model fitted the maximum phosphorus adsorption capacity to 72.69 mg·g-1. The main adsorption mechanisms were electrostatic attraction and ligand exchange. Adding lanthanum-modified water treatment sludge hydrochar into the sediment could effectively control the release of endogenous phosphorus from the sediment to the overlying water. According to the analysis of phosphorus forms in sediment, the addition of hydrochar promoted the transformation of unstable NH4Cl-P, BD-P and Org-P into the very stable HCl-P in the sediment, which reduced the content of potential active phosphorus and also significantly reduced the content of biologically available phosphorus. This indicated that lanthanum-modified water treatment sludge hydrochar could effectively adsorb and remove phosphorus in water and could also be used as sediment improvement material to effectively stabilize endogenous phosphorus in sediment and control phosphorus content in water.

Keywords: endogenous phosphorus; hydrothermal; immobilization; lanthanum-modified; sediment; water treatment sludge.

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