Adsorption capacity of coal-based activated carbon in advanced treatment of drinking water

Bibliographic Details
Title: Adsorption capacity of coal-based activated carbon in advanced treatment of drinking water
Authors: Wan Chaoran, Xie Qiang, Liu Deqian, Zhou Yihuan, Wu Haotian, Yang Shuai
Source: 矿业科学学报, Vol 6, Iss 4, Pp 487-496 (2021)
Publisher Information: Emergency Management Press, 2021.
Publication Year: 2021
Collection: LCC:Engineering geology. Rock mechanics. Soil mechanics. Underground construction
LCC:Mining engineering. Metallurgy
Subject Terms: coal-based activated carbon, advanced treatment of drinking water, absorption capacity, rssct, Engineering geology. Rock mechanics. Soil mechanics. Underground construction, TA703-712, Mining engineering. Metallurgy, TN1-997
More Details: Activated carbon is the core material in the process of advanced treatment of drinking water. Evaluating the adsorption capacity of activated carbon accurately is the basis of its selection in practical applications. In this study, four typical commercial coal-based activated carbon samples were collected, and a wood-based activated carbon was selected as a comparison. The conventional adsorption performance indexes such as iodine value, methylene blue value, caramel decolorization rate and static adsorption capacity of tannic acid (TA) and humic acid (HA) were determined. Rapid Small-Scale Column Tests (RSSCT) was used to determine the breakthrough curves of activated carbon adsorption on water samples containing TA and HA to evaluate the dynamic adsorption performance of it. The pore structure and surface micro-topography of activated carbons were characterized by N2 adsorption isotherms and scanning electron microscopy energy dispersive X ray analysis (SEM-EDS). Frenkel-Halsey-Hill model was used to calculate the fractal of activate carbons. The results show that the iodine value, methylene blue value, caramel decolorization rate, tannin acid isothermal adsorption capacity and humic acid isothermal adsorption capacity are obviously correlated with the pore development degree of activated carbon. The anthracite-based activated carbon had the best dynamic adsorption performance in the RSSCT, indicating that the dynamic adsorption performance of activated carbon was less correlated with the pore structure of activated carbon and more correlated with the surface roughness. Therefore, the activated carbon samples can be initially selected by the surface roughness. And then the RSSCT result of the HA is used to select an activated carbon with optimized adsorption capacity under the practical conditions of advanced drinking water treatment.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
Chinese
ISSN: 2096-2193
Relation: https://doaj.org/toc/2096-2193
DOI: 10.19606/j.cnki.jmst.2021.04.014
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/fadb306c08014c839bf304104a5a0291
Accession Number: edsdoj.fadb306c08014c839bf304104a5a0291
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals
More Details
ISSN:20962193
DOI:10.19606/j.cnki.jmst.2021.04.014
Published in:矿业科学学报
Language:English
Chinese