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Environmental Processes
New Insights and Model for Understanding NOM Adsorption onto Mixed Adsorbents Siamak Modarresi, and Mark Benjamin Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b00849 • Publication Date (Web): 08 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 8, 2018
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Environmental Science & Technology
New Insights and Model for Understanding NOM Adsorption onto Mixed Adsorbents
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By
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Siamak Modarresi and Mark M. Benjamin*
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Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Box 352700, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195
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Abstract
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Adsorption-based processes are commonly used to remove natural organic matter (NOM)
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from drinking water sources and thereby mitigate its impacts on other water treatment
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processes and the quality of the finished water. These processes are complicated by the fact
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that NOM comprises multiple fractions that can exhibit disparate adsorption behaviors. Prior
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modeling of NOM adsorption has invariably focused on systems with a single adsorbent, but
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results presented here demonstrate surprising and counter-intuitive behavior in systems
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containing two or more adsorbents. Specifically, if the sequence of affinities of the different
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NOM fractions are the same for two adsorbents, then overall adsorption changes
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monotonically as one adsorbent is gradually replaced by the other. However, if the sequence
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differs for the two adsorbents, overall adsorption can increase even when the nominally
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stronger adsorbent is gradually replaced by the weaker one. This work demonstrates and
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explains such behavior for a particular mixture of adsorbents and introduces a mathematical
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model that illustrates how other mixtures might behave.
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Environmental Science & Technology
Abstract/TOC Art DOC adsorbed (mg /l)
2.5
PAC dose = Total dose − HAOPs dose
2.0
50 mg/l 1.5
20 mg/l
1.0
Model 1 0.5
Total adsorbent dose: 10 mg/l
0.0 0
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10
20
Model 2 30
40
50
HAOPs dose (mg/l)
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1.
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Introduction
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Natural organic matter (NOM) comprises a diverse group of organic compounds arising
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from plant degradation and microbial metabolism1,2. It can impart taste, odor and color to water;
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react with disinfectants to produce toxic and/or carcinogenic disinfection by-products (DBPs)3–5;
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increase the required doses of coagulant, adsorbent and disinfectant for effective water treatment;
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and foul microfiltration and ultrafiltration membranes6–10. For all these reasons, NOM is a major
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target of water treatment operations.
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The most commonly used process for NOM removal is coagulation with Al- or Fe-based
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salts, in which the primary removal mechanism is adsorption onto the hydrous metal oxide
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precipitates that the coagulants generate. Coagulation works well for removing high-molecular
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weight NOM with high specific UV absorbance at 254 nm (SUVA254), but it is less effective at
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removing low-molecular weight NOM with low SUVA25411. Adsorption by activated carbon has
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also been extensively studied for NOM treatment and has been found to depend strongly on the
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volume of pores in the secondary micropore and mesopore regions (0.8–5nm)12,13. In most
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studies, activated carbon adsorption and metal oxide coagulation have been found to target
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different NOM fractions, with coagulation preferentially collecting larger molecules (>30 kDa)
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and PAC more efficient at collecting smaller ones
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combined with PAC adsorption, DOC removal over a broad range of molecular weights can be
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attained. When this approach has been applied to enhance removal of DBP precursors or mitigate
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membrane fouling, the results have often been encouraging in laboratory studies, but those in
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pilot- or full-scale applications have been mixed17–24.
13–16
. As a result, when coagulation is
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Heated aluminum oxide particles (HAOPs) are a novel adsorbent first synthesized by Kim et
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al.25 At low doses, HAOPs remove more NOM than conventional coagulants (alum and ferric
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chloride) do, but at high doses, the removal efficiency reaches a plateau, indicating that a fraction
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of the NOM cannot adsorb onto HAOPs26. Much of the NOM that is not adsorbable on HAOPs
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can adsorb onto PAC26, so applying a mixture of HAOPs and PAC might be an effective
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treatment strategy.
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NOM is frequently characterized by fractionation based on the molecules’ hydrophobicity,
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acid/base characteristics, and/or molecular weight27. By comparing the concentrations of
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different fractions before and after treatment of the whole water, or by subjecting the isolated
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fractions to various treatment steps, researchers have attempted to infer which components of
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NOM are selectively targeted by the treatments, and which ones are responsible for adverse
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impacts such as DBP formation and membrane fouling5,14,28–30. While these studies have greatly
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enhanced our understanding of the chemical nature and reactivity of NOM, they have not led to
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many practical improvements in water treatment applications. This limitation arises both because
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the molecular properties of the NOM are distributed more or less continuously across a wide
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spectrum, rather than falling neatly into the well-defined ranges implied by the fractionation
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procedure, and because treatment processes are similarly imprecise in the types of molecules that
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they remove. As a result, designing and operating a practical treatment process that selectively
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targets a particular subset of the NOM molecules has proven extremely challenging.
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Rather than focusing on the chemical distinctions among different NOM fractions, some
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researchers have used adsorption directly to characterize the fractions31–34. In this approach, the
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NOM is represented as a mixture of several “fictive” components that compete for the available
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surface sites. The components are assigned adsorptive properties that, when considered in
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conjunction with a specific model for competitive adsorption, cause the overall NOM adsorption
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computed using the model to mimic the experimental findings, without ascribing any particular
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molecular properties to the different components. The research presented here evaluated the
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removal of NOM from water by mixtures of HAOPs and PAC and modeled the results in terms
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of fictive NOM components. The work yielded unexpected results and provided new insights
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into competitive adsorption in systems containing not only multiple adsorbates, but also multiple
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adsorbents.
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2.
Materials and methods
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Freshwater for the tests was collected from Lake Union (LU) in Seattle, WA. The water
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contained 2.4±0.3 mg/l DOC and had UV254 of 0.057±0.03 cm–1; these parameters were closely
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correlated with one another in the subsequent adsorption tests, and both were used as indicators
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of NOM concentration. The pH of the samples was adjusted to 7.0±0.05, and 0.5 mM each of
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NaCl and NaHCO3 was added to increase the ionic strength and buffer capacity. HAOPs were
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synthesized following the approach of Kim et al.25, and Norit SA SUPER PAC was purchased
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commercially (Cabot Co. Boston, MA). Some key properties of the adsorbents are provided in
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Table SI-1 of the Supplementary Information (SI).
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Batch adsorption was investigated by adding either one or both adsorbents to flasks
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containing the test water and mixing the suspensions on a rotary shaker for two hours. This
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mixing time was chosen both because it is at the upper end of exposure times for adsorption at
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water treatment plants and because, as shown in Figure SI-1, the rate of adsorption onto both
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adsorbents was very low at the end of that period. The solids were then removed by filtration
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through 0.45-µm filters and analyzed for DOC and UV254. UV254 was measured with a dual-
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beam Lambda-18 spectrophotometer (Perkin-Elmer Gmbh., Überlingen Germany) using a 1-cm
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quartz cell, and DOC was determined with a Sievers 900 TOC analyzer (GE Analytical
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Instruments, Boulder, CO).
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3.
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Batch adsorption of NOM
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Results and discussion
The removal of DOC by PAC and HAOPs in single-adsorbent systems is characterized in Figure 1. PAC removed more DOC than HAOPs did at all the adsorbent doses investigated.
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Because DOC removal by HAOPs approached a plateau at high adsorbent doses, adsorption
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in that system was modeled by treating the NOM as comprising two fictive components – one
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component (A) that is adsorbable on HAOPs and accounts for 45% of the DOC, and a second
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component (B) that cannot adsorb on HAOPs and accounts for the remaining 55%. With that
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assumption, the conceptual model corresponds to the model that leads to the classical Langmuir
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isotherm for a system containing a single adsorbate that binds to a single type of adsorbent site
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(Eqn.1):
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qH,A =
qmax,H K H,A cA
(1)
1 + K H,A cA
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where qH,A is the equilibrium adsorption density (mg DOC/g) of NOM (fictive) component A on
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HAOPs (‘H’), qmax,H is the maximum adsorption density on HAOPs, KH,A is the adsorptive
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equilibrium constant for binding of A to HAOPs, and cA is the dissolved concentration of A at
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equilibrium. The data could be fit very well by this isotherm equation, as shown in Figure 1.
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Adsorption of the NOM onto PAC was then modeled using the same two fictive
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components and, again, only one type of surface site. In this case, however, both the A and B
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components of the NOM were assumed to adsorb, albeit with different affinities for the surface;
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that is, the two fictive components competed with one another for the surface sites, so adsorption
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was modeled using the two-component competitive Langmuir isotherm (Eq.2a,b):
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qP,A =
qmax,P K P,A cA
(2a)
1 + K P,A cA + K P,BcB
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qP,B =
qmax,P K P,BcB
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(2b)
1 + K P,A cA + K P,BcB
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This modeling approach again yielded a very good fit to the experimental data. However, two
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sets of Langmuir parameters fit the data equally well – one with NOM component A adsorbing
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more strongly than component B (KP,A>KP,B), and one with the opposite order of affinities
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(KP,AKH,B (=0), if KP,A>KP,B, the NOM
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component that binds more strongly to HAOPs also binds more strongly to PAC (maximum
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overlap), and if KP,AKP,B) 0.876 0.065 0.221
HAOPs 1.140 0.000 0.185
PAC (KP,A