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Batch and continuous flow studies of adsorptive removal of Cr(VI) by adapted bacterial consortia immobilized in alginate beads. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the effectiveness of alginate beads with Cr(VI)-adapted bacteria (Acinetobacter junii, Escherichia coli, and Bacillus subtilis) for removing chromium (Cr(VI)) from water in both batch and continuous reactors.
  • Under optimal conditions (pH 3.0, 180 min contact time, 30 °C), the batch setup achieved an adsorption capacity of 65.86 mg/g, while the continuous reactor reached a significantly higher capacity of 657 mg/g with specific parameters.
  • The research also confirmed that the adsorption process fitted the Langmuir isotherm and pseudo second order kinetics, with effective regeneration rates over five cycles and notable removal rates of Cr(VI) from

Article Abstract

The adsorptive removal of Cr(VI) by alginate beads containing Cr(VI)-adapted Acinetobacter junii, Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis in batch and continuous packed bed column reactors was investigated. Under optimized conditions (pH 3.0; contact time, 180 min; 30 °C; initial Cr(VI) concentration of 100 mg/L), 65.86 mg/g adsorption capacity was recorded in the batch study. When an adsorbent dosage of 1g/L, a flow rate of 5 mL/min, a bed height of 20 cm, an initial Cr(VI) concentration of 300 mg/L was employed, a capacity of 657 mg/g was noted for the continuous column assay. The batch sorption data followed the Langmuir isotherm and pseudo second order kinetics. Five sorption/desorption cycles yielded 100%, 99.63%, 95.31%, 80.7% and 74.22% regeneration, respectively. Cr(VI) adsorption studies using spiked ground water, freshwater and domestic wastewater in a packed bed reactor demonstrated Cr(VI) removals of 64.8%, 55.08%, 56.86% respectively. Cr(VI) sorption on immobilized bacteria was confirmed with Fourier-transform infrared and Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2012.10.116DOI Listing

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