Sorption of Atrazine in Tropical Soil by Biochar Prepared from Cassava Waste

Biochar (BC) is a carbonaceous and porous product generated from the incomplete combustion of biomass and has been recognized as an efficient adsorbent. This study evaluated the ability of BC to sorb atrazine pesticide in tropical soil, and explored potential environmental values of BC on mitigating...

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Main Authors: Hui Deng, Huamei Yu, Miao Chen, Chengjun Ge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: North Carolina State University 2014-09-01
Series:BioResources
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.cnr.ncsu.edu/index.php/BioRes/article/view/BioRes_09_4_6627_Deng_Sorption_Atrazine_Tropical_Soil
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spelling doaj-00db1d3a79854688906207d4d18630b52020-11-25T01:52:28ZengNorth Carolina State UniversityBioResources1930-21261930-21262014-09-01946627664310.15376/biores.9.4.6627-6643Sorption of Atrazine in Tropical Soil by Biochar Prepared from Cassava WasteHui Deng0Huamei Yu1Miao Chen2Chengjun Ge3Hainan University, China; ChinaHainan University, China; ChinaInsititute of Environment and Plant Protection, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, China; ChinaHainan University, China; ChinaBiochar (BC) is a carbonaceous and porous product generated from the incomplete combustion of biomass and has been recognized as an efficient adsorbent. This study evaluated the ability of BC to sorb atrazine pesticide in tropical soil, and explored potential environmental values of BC on mitigating organic micro-pollutants. BC was produced from cassava waste via pyrolyzation under oxygen-limiting conditions at 350, 550, and 750 °C (MS350, MS550, and MS750, respectively). Three biochars were characterized and investigated as sorbents for the removal atrazine from tropical soil. BC pyrolyzed at higher temperatures more quickly reached equilibrium. The pseudo-second-order model perfectly simulated the sorption kinetics for atrazine with the coefficients R2 above 0.996, and the sorption amount at equilibrium (qe) was 0.016 mg/g for MS350, 0.025 mg/g for MS550 and 0.050 mg/g for MS750. The isotherms of MS350 displayed relatively linear behavior, whereas the sorption of atrazine on MS550 and MS750 followed a nonlinear isotherm. The sorption data were well described by the Freundlich model with logKF of 0.476 for MS350, 0.771 for MS550, 1.865 for MS750. A thermodynamic study indicated that the sorption of atrazine in BC-added soil was a spontaneous and endothermic process and was primarily controlled by physisorption. In addition, lower pH was conducive to the sorption of atrazine in BC-added soil.http://ojs.cnr.ncsu.edu/index.php/BioRes/article/view/BioRes_09_4_6627_Deng_Sorption_Atrazine_Tropical_SoilSorptionBiocharsCassava wastesAtrazinePaddy soil
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hui Deng
Huamei Yu
Miao Chen
Chengjun Ge
spellingShingle Hui Deng
Huamei Yu
Miao Chen
Chengjun Ge
Sorption of Atrazine in Tropical Soil by Biochar Prepared from Cassava Waste
BioResources
Sorption
Biochars
Cassava wastes
Atrazine
Paddy soil
author_facet Hui Deng
Huamei Yu
Miao Chen
Chengjun Ge
author_sort Hui Deng
title Sorption of Atrazine in Tropical Soil by Biochar Prepared from Cassava Waste
title_short Sorption of Atrazine in Tropical Soil by Biochar Prepared from Cassava Waste
title_full Sorption of Atrazine in Tropical Soil by Biochar Prepared from Cassava Waste
title_fullStr Sorption of Atrazine in Tropical Soil by Biochar Prepared from Cassava Waste
title_full_unstemmed Sorption of Atrazine in Tropical Soil by Biochar Prepared from Cassava Waste
title_sort sorption of atrazine in tropical soil by biochar prepared from cassava waste
publisher North Carolina State University
series BioResources
issn 1930-2126
1930-2126
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Biochar (BC) is a carbonaceous and porous product generated from the incomplete combustion of biomass and has been recognized as an efficient adsorbent. This study evaluated the ability of BC to sorb atrazine pesticide in tropical soil, and explored potential environmental values of BC on mitigating organic micro-pollutants. BC was produced from cassava waste via pyrolyzation under oxygen-limiting conditions at 350, 550, and 750 °C (MS350, MS550, and MS750, respectively). Three biochars were characterized and investigated as sorbents for the removal atrazine from tropical soil. BC pyrolyzed at higher temperatures more quickly reached equilibrium. The pseudo-second-order model perfectly simulated the sorption kinetics for atrazine with the coefficients R2 above 0.996, and the sorption amount at equilibrium (qe) was 0.016 mg/g for MS350, 0.025 mg/g for MS550 and 0.050 mg/g for MS750. The isotherms of MS350 displayed relatively linear behavior, whereas the sorption of atrazine on MS550 and MS750 followed a nonlinear isotherm. The sorption data were well described by the Freundlich model with logKF of 0.476 for MS350, 0.771 for MS550, 1.865 for MS750. A thermodynamic study indicated that the sorption of atrazine in BC-added soil was a spontaneous and endothermic process and was primarily controlled by physisorption. In addition, lower pH was conducive to the sorption of atrazine in BC-added soil.
topic Sorption
Biochars
Cassava wastes
Atrazine
Paddy soil
url http://ojs.cnr.ncsu.edu/index.php/BioRes/article/view/BioRes_09_4_6627_Deng_Sorption_Atrazine_Tropical_Soil
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