Nickel Hyperaccumulator Biochar Sorbs Ni(II) from Water and Wastewater to Create an Enhanced Bio-ore.

ACS Environ Au

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Iowa, 4105 Seamans Center for the Engineering Arts and Sciences, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, United States.

Published: January 2023

Nickel (Ni) hyperaccumulators make up the largest proportion of hyperaccumulator plant species; however, very few biochar studies with hyperaccumulator feedstock have examined them. This research addresses two major hypotheses: (1) Biochar synthesized from the Ni hyperaccumulator grown on natural, metal-rich soil is an effective Ni sorbent due to the plant's ability to bioaccumulate soluble and exchangeable cations; and (2) such biochar can sorb high concentrations of Ni from complex solutions. We found that grew on sandy, nutrient-poor soil from a Minnesota mining district but did not hyperaccumulate Ni. Biochar prepared from biomass at a pyrolysis temperature of 900 °C sorbed up to 154 mg g of Ni from solution, which is competitive with the highest-performing Ni sorbents in recent literature and the highest of any unmodified, plant-based biochar material reported in the literature. Precipitation, cation exchange, and adsorption mechanisms contributed to removal. Ni was effectively removed from acidic solutions with initial pH > 2 within 30 min. biochar also removed Ni(II) from a simulated Ni electroplating rinsewater solution. Together, these results provide evidence for biochar as an attractive material for simultaneously treating high-Ni wastewater and forming an enhanced Ni bio-ore.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9853938PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsenvironau.2c00028DOI Listing

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