Short-term adsorption of gold using self-flocculating microalga from wastewater and its regeneration potential by bio-flocculation

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Shen, Na
Chirwa, Evans M.N.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Abstract

The challenge of economical separation of tiny microalgal cells from diluted solutions restricts their industry commercialization as promising biosorbents. In this study, The freshwater self-flocculating microalga Tetradesmus obliquus AS-6-1 was used as biosorbent to recover gold from wastewater. Maximum Au(III) adsorption capacity was obtained at optimal conditions of 0.1 g L−1 biomass, pH 2.0, 25 °C within 30 min for an initial concentration of 5 mg L−1. The higher maximum adsorption capacity (qm) and Langmuir constant (b) for T. obliquus AS-6-1 indicated its potential as efficient adsorbent for gold recovery. Detailed surface characterization demonstrated that polysaccharides excreted from the self-flocculating microalga were responsible for the better adsorption performance of T. obliquus AS-6-1. Flocculating activity results showed that T. obliquus AS-6-1 could efficiently settle down at the bottom by bio-flocculation within 20 min. The regenerated microalgae in the funnel reactor retained high adsorption efficiency of > 97% in the first two adsorption/desorption cycles. The results from this study firstly demonstrated that the self-flocculating microalga not only benefited its biomass recovery by its bio-flocculating property but also improved its potential for gold recovery from wastewater.

Description

Keywords

Regeneration, Bio-flocculation, Gold recovery, Biosorption, Self-flocculating microalga, Chlorophyta, Metal ions, Alga, Gold(III), Equilibrium, Nanoparticles, Kinetics, Biomass, Precious metals, Selective recovery

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Shen, N. & Chirwa, E.M.N. Short-term adsorption of gold using self-flocculating microalga from wastewater and its regeneration potential by bio-flocculation. Journal of Applied Phycology (2019) 31: 1783-1792. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10811-018-1670-4.