Short-term adsorption of gold using self-flocculating microalga from wastewater and its regeneration potential by bio-flocculation
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Date
Authors
Shen, Na
Chirwa, Evans M.N.
Journal Title
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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.
