could not predict the influence of pH, which may be one of A fundamental study of the application of bacteria to the recovthe most important influencing factor, on biosorption. Only ery of toxic heavy metals from aqueous environments was carried a few studies dealt with the effect of pH on metal bin
Assessment of interference in biosorption of a heavy metal
β Scribed by M. M. Figueira; B. Volesky; V. S. T. Ciminelli
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 191 KB
- Volume
- 54
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3592
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β¦ Synopsis
Nonliving biomass of Sargassum, a brown marine alga, is capable of binding more than 10% of its dry weight in toxic cadmium ions. Although ubiquitous iron interferes with Cd uptake, only approximately 4.5% of it is sequestered (biomass dry weight). Biosorption of both metals at pH 4.5 could be described by Langmuir-type isotherms with b, the affinity-related coefficient (Cd: b = 0.015; Fe: b = 0.027). The interference of Fe with Cd uptake, and vice versa, was assessed by deriving threedimensional equilibrium two-metal sorption isotherm surfaces, smoothed and ''cut'' to reveal the inhibition effect of Fe on biosorption of Cd: at the equilibrium concentration Cf [Cd] = 1.5 mM, the presence of Fe at 1.5 mM equilibrium concentration suppressed the Cd uptake to only 76% of the original value. For 50% Cd uptake reduction, a very high equilibrium Fe presence of 4.5 mM was required. The Cd presence affected the uptake of Fe very strongly. To obtain equal values of uptake for each metal in the biosorbent, the ratio of equilibrium concentrations of 0.42 Cd to 1 Fe is necessary in the liquid phase.
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## Abstract The sorption capacity of the brown alga __Fucus vesiculosus__ for copper, cadmium, lead and nickel was investigated. Metal sorption yields were modified using different kinds of pretreatment reagents: HCl, CaCl~2~, formaldehyde, Na~2~CO~3~ and NaOH. The Langmuir isotherm was applied to