Comparative screening study on the adsorption of aqueous Pb(II) using different metabolically inhibited bacterial cultures from industry

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Kpai, Patrick Y.
Nel, Jaco
Haneklaus, Nils
Chirwa, Evans M.N.
Brink, Hendrik Gideon

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Abstract

The global concern about the water pollution caused by heavy metals necessitates effective water treatment methods. Adsorption, with its substantial advantages, stands out as a promising approach. This study delves into the efficiency of Pb(II) removal using metabolically inhibited microbial cultures. These cultures encompass waste-activated sewage sludge (SS), industrially sourced bioremediation microbes (commercial 1—C1 and commercial 2—C2), an industrially acquired Pb(II) remediating consortium (Cons), and refined strains (derived from Cons) of Paraclostridium bifermentans (PB) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (KP). Our findings reveal maximum Pb(II) adsorption capacities of 141.2 mg/g (SS), 208.5 mg/g (C1), 193.8 mg/g (C2), 220.4 mg/g (Cons), 153.2 mg/g (PB), and 217.7 mg/g (KP). The adsorption kinetics adhere to a two-phase pseudo-first-order model, indicative of distinct fast and slow adsorption rates. Equilibrium isotherms align well with the two-surface Langmuir model, implying varied adsorption sites with differing energies. The Crank mass transfer model highlights external mass transfer as the primary mechanism for Pb(II) removal. Surface interactions between sulfur (S) and lead (Pb) point to the formation of robust surface complexes. FTIR analysis detects diverse functional groups on the adsorbents’ surfaces, while BET analyses reveal non-porous agglomerates with a minimal internal surface area. The Pb(II) recovery rates are notable, with values of 72.4% (SS), 68.6% (C1), 69.7% (C2), 69.6% (Cons), 61.0% (PB), and 72.4% (KP), underscoring the potential of these cost-effective adsorbents for treating Pb(II)-contaminated aqueous streams and contributing to enhanced pollution control measures. Nevertheless, optimization studies are imperative to evaluate the optimal operational conditions and extend the application to adsorb diverse environmental contaminants.

Description

DATA AVAILABILITY : Data for this study can be found within the article.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS : TABLE S1. Experimental data for two-phase pseudofirst- order kinetics for metabolically inactive adsorbents; TABLE S2. Statistical test for temperature effect; FIGURE S1. Pseudo-second-order kinetics of Pb(II) onto metabolically inactive adsorbents; FIGURE S2. Pseudo-first-order kinetics of Pb(II) onto metabolically inactive adsorbents; FIGURE S3. Crank mass transfer model of Pb(II) onto metabolically inactive adsorbents; FIGURE S4. Langmuir isotherm for metabolically inactive adsorbents; FIGURE S5. Freundlich isotherm for metabolically inactive adsorbents; FIGURE S6. Hysteresis loops for BET for the different biosorbents; FIGURE S7. Correlation graphs of elemental compositions and location obtained from SEM-EDX.

Keywords

Lead, Adsorption, Wastewater treatment, Activated sludge, Water pollution, SDG-06: Clean water and sanitation

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-06:Clean water and sanitation

Citation

Kpai, P.Y.; Nel, J.; Haneklaus, N.; Chirwa, E.M.N.; Brink, H.G. Comparative Screening Study on the Adsorption of Aqueous Pb(II) Using Different Metabolically Inhibited Bacterial Cultures from Industry. Water 2023, 15, 4259. https://DOI.org/10.3390/w15244259.