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Adsorption of phenols from olive oil waste waters on layered double hydroxide, hydroxyaluminium?iron-co-precipitate and hydroxyaluminium?iron?montmorillonite complex

Authors :
Hassan K. Obied
Michele Arienzo
Antonio De Martino
Danielle Ryan
Marianna Iorio
Paul D. Prenzler
Antonio De, Martino
Marianna, Iorio
Paul D., Prenzler
Danielle, Ryan
Hassan K., Obied
Arienzo, Michele
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Olive mill waste water (OMWW) contains high concentrations of phenols that are responsible for the high toxicity of the effluent. A one step precipitation process of OMWW by cold methanol yielded a polymeric organic precipitate (polymerin) and a supernatant (OMWW-S) rich in phenols, which were further concentrated in an ethyl acetate extract (OMWW-E). This extract was comparatively adsorbed on: i) a layered double hydroxide of magnesium and aluminium (LDH); ii) the LDH after calcination at 450 °C (LDH-450); iii) a hydroxyaluminium–iron-co-precipitate (HyAlFe); and iv) a hydroxy-aluminium–iron–montmorillonite complex (HyAlFe-Mt). Adsorption behaviour and kinetics of phenols with these materials were investigated. The Langmuir model better described adsorption (R 2 > 0.97) in comparison to the Freundlich model (R 2 > 0.89). Phenols were sorbed according to the following order: LDH-450 > LDH > HyAlFe > HyAlFe-Mt. Phenol adsorption on LDH matrices was strong, since desorption with simulated soil solution under dynamic conditions never exceeded 20%. Cyclic adsorption conducted with LDH-450 removed most phenols, ~ 94% from OMWW-E, consequently reducing its phytotoxicity. The study evidenced that calcined LDH represented an effective remediation process for OMWW.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d1c7e308f5e8dd300ba798ac87adb3e4