Biosorption of heavy metals by Fucus spiralis
Bioresource technology, 2008•Elsevier
The sorption uptake of cadmium, nickel, zinc, copper and lead by marine brown alga Fucus
spiralis was investigated in bimetallic, trimetallic and multimetallic solutions. The
experimental data fitted very well to Langmuir model. In bimetallic systems, the affinity of
biomass for lead and copper increased and the sorption uptake of these metals was not
affected by increasing concentrations of cadmium, nickel or zinc. However, in solutions with
both metals there was a significant mutual decrease of their sorption levels at high …
spiralis was investigated in bimetallic, trimetallic and multimetallic solutions. The
experimental data fitted very well to Langmuir model. In bimetallic systems, the affinity of
biomass for lead and copper increased and the sorption uptake of these metals was not
affected by increasing concentrations of cadmium, nickel or zinc. However, in solutions with
both metals there was a significant mutual decrease of their sorption levels at high …
The sorption uptake of cadmium, nickel, zinc, copper and lead by marine brown alga Fucus spiralis was investigated in bimetallic, trimetallic and multimetallic solutions. The experimental data fitted very well to Langmuir model. In bimetallic systems, the affinity of biomass for lead and copper increased and the sorption uptake of these metals was not affected by increasing concentrations of cadmium, nickel or zinc. However, in solutions with both metals there was a significant mutual decrease of their sorption levels at high concentrations of the other metal. The sorption uptake of cadmium, nickel and copper was investigated in trimetallic aqueous systems. Based on the kinetic parameter b, the affinity of F. spiralis for copper was considerably higher than for cadmium or nickel: bCd=6.39, bNi=1.82 and bCu=17.89. In all tests, the maximum sorption uptake remained practically constant around 1mmol/g, indicating that the number of active sites on the biomass was limited. Tests with four and five metals showed that copper was preferentially adsorbed. The differences between the experimental sorption data and those given by the chemical speciation program PHREEQCI were negligible. In general, the software used provided satisfactory estimated data for each metal and hence can be a useful tool to predict or simulate the real process.
Elsevier
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