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Application of Fesub.2Osub.3 Catalytic Sludge Ceramics in the Control of Eutrophication in Water Bodies
by
Zuo, Zongliang
, Cui, Jiacheng
, Song, Xiangyu
, Meng, Gang
, Yuan, Haoyan
, Luo, Siyi
in
Adsorption
/ Ammonia
/ Aquatic resources
/ Catalysis
/ Ceramic materials
/ Ceramics
/ China
/ Eutrophication
/ Sludge
/ Thermodynamics
/ Water pollution
2025
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Application of Fesub.2Osub.3 Catalytic Sludge Ceramics in the Control of Eutrophication in Water Bodies
by
Zuo, Zongliang
, Cui, Jiacheng
, Song, Xiangyu
, Meng, Gang
, Yuan, Haoyan
, Luo, Siyi
in
Adsorption
/ Ammonia
/ Aquatic resources
/ Catalysis
/ Ceramic materials
/ Ceramics
/ China
/ Eutrophication
/ Sludge
/ Thermodynamics
/ Water pollution
2025
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Application of Fesub.2Osub.3 Catalytic Sludge Ceramics in the Control of Eutrophication in Water Bodies
by
Zuo, Zongliang
, Cui, Jiacheng
, Song, Xiangyu
, Meng, Gang
, Yuan, Haoyan
, Luo, Siyi
in
Adsorption
/ Ammonia
/ Aquatic resources
/ Catalysis
/ Ceramic materials
/ Ceramics
/ China
/ Eutrophication
/ Sludge
/ Thermodynamics
/ Water pollution
2025
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Application of Fesub.2Osub.3 Catalytic Sludge Ceramics in the Control of Eutrophication in Water Bodies
Journal Article
Application of Fesub.2Osub.3 Catalytic Sludge Ceramics in the Control of Eutrophication in Water Bodies
2025
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Overview
The excessive input of nitrogen and phosphorus pollutants into surface water bodies poses a serious threat to the aquatic ecosystem. As an efficient porous adsorbent material, ceramsite shows remarkable potential in the field of simultaneous nitrogen and phosphorus removal. In this study, Fe[sub.2]O[sub.3] catalyzed the decomposition of K[sub.2]CO[sub.3] to generate CO and CO[sub.2] gases, leading to the formation of a large number of pore structures in the composite ceramsite. Subsequently, adsorption experiments were conducted on the obtained ceramsite. The regulatory mechanisms of the ceramsite dosage and solution pH on its adsorption performance were revealed. The experiments show that as the ceramsite dosage increased from 2.1 g/L to 9.6 g/L, the adsorption capacities of ammonia–nitrogen and phosphorus decreased from 0.4521 mg/g and 0.4280 mg/g to 0.1430 mg/g and 0.1819 mg/g, respectively, while the removal rates increased to 68.66% and 58.22%, respectively. This indicates that the competition between the utilization efficiency of adsorption sites and the mass-transfer limitation between particles dominates this process. An analysis of the pH effect reveals that the adsorption of ammonia–nitrogen reached a peak at pH = 10 (adsorption capacity of 0.4429 mg/g and removal rate of 81.58%), while the optimal adsorption of phosphorus occurred at pH = 7 (adsorption capacity of 0.3446 mg/g and removal rate of 86.40%). This phenomenon is closely related to the interaction between the existing forms of pollutants and the surface charge. Kinetic and thermodynamic studies show that the pseudo-second-order kinetic model (R[sup.2] > 0.99) and the Langmuir isothermal model can accurately describe the adsorption behavior of the ceramsite for ammonia–nitrogen and phosphorus, confirming that the adsorption is dominated by a monolayer chemical adsorption mechanism. This study explores the dosage–efficiency relationship and pH response mechanism of Fe[sub.2]O[sub.3]-catalyzed porous ceramsite for nitrogen and phosphorus adsorption, revealing the interface reaction pathway dominated by Fe[sub.2]O[sub.3] catalysis and chemical adsorption. It provides theoretical support for the construction of porous ceramsite and the development of an efficient technology system for the synergistic removal of nitrogen and phosphorus.
Publisher
MDPI AG
Subject
MBRLCatalogueRelatedBooks
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