Weathered Coal-Immobilized Microbial Materials as a Highly Efficient Adsorbent for the Removal of Lead

Molecules. 2024 Jan 31;29(3):660. doi: 10.3390/molecules29030660.

Abstract

Most research on immobilized microorganisms employs biomass charcoal as a carrier, but limited studies explore coal-based resources for microbial immobilization. Herein, lead-resistant functional strains were immobilized using weathered coal as a carrier, resulting in the development of a weathered coal-immobilized microbial material (JK-BW) exhibiting high efficiency in lead removal from solutions. A quadratic polynomial model for the adsorption capacity and adsorption rate of JK-BW on Pb2+ was developed using the Box-Behnken method to determine the optimal adsorption conditions. The Pb2+ adsorption mechanism of JK-BW was studied through batch adsorption and desorption experiments along with SEM-EDS, BET, FT-IR, and XPS analyses. Findings indicated that optimal conditions were identified at 306 K temperature, 0.36 g/L adsorbent dosage, and 300 mg/L initial solution concentration, achieving a peak adsorption performance of 338.9 mg/g (308 K) for the immobilized material, surpassing free cell adsorption by 3.8 times. Even after four cycles of repeated use, the material maintained its high adsorption capacity. Pb2+ adsorption by JK-BW involved monolayer chemisorption with ion exchange, complexation, precipitation, physical adsorption, and microbial intracellular phagocytosis. Ion exchange accounted for 22-42% and complexation accounted for 39-57% of the total adsorption mechanisms, notably involving exchanges with K, Ca, Na, and Mg ions as well as complexation with -OH, -COOH, CO-OH, -COOH, CO-, NH2, and the β-ring of pyridine for Pb2+ adsorption.

Keywords: adsorption conditions; adsorption mechanism; immobilized microbial materials; lead; weathered coal.

MeSH terms

  • Adsorption
  • Coal* / analysis
  • Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
  • Kinetics
  • Lead
  • Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
  • Temperature
  • Water Pollutants, Chemical* / analysis
  • Weather

Substances

  • Coal
  • Lead
  • Water Pollutants, Chemical

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the National Key R&D Projects (2020YFC1806504-03); Natural Science Foundation of Shanxi Province (202103021224137); Award for Outstanding Doctor of Shanxi Province (SXBYKY2021089); and Start-up Program for Doctor of Shanxi Agricultural University (2021BQ48, 2021BQ49).