Remediation of Copper and Zinc from wastewater by modified clay in Asir region southwest of Saudi Arabia

To investigate the efficacy of modified clay minerals to remediate heavy metals from industrial wastewater, two natural clay sediments dominated by kaolinite were selected. Since the kaolinite clay has low cation exchange capacity, some modifications were made using unusual treatments thermal transf...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Abdallah Samy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2019-10-01
Series:Open Geosciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/geo-2019-0041
id doaj-aef912edd4c847459aa5e3d73747f658
record_format Article
spelling doaj-aef912edd4c847459aa5e3d73747f6582021-09-05T20:50:50ZengDe GruyterOpen Geosciences2391-54472019-10-0111150551210.1515/geo-2019-0041geo-2019-0041Remediation of Copper and Zinc from wastewater by modified clay in Asir region southwest of Saudi ArabiaAbdallah Samy0Department of Biolog, Faculty of Science, Prince Sultan Bin Abdulaziz center for environment and tourism research, king Khalid University, P.O. Box 960Abha 61421, Saudi ArabiaTo investigate the efficacy of modified clay minerals to remediate heavy metals from industrial wastewater, two natural clay sediments dominated by kaolinite were selected. Since the kaolinite clay has low cation exchange capacity, some modifications were made using unusual treatments thermal transformation and acid activation techniques were used to increase exchangeability properties for producing modified kaolinite. The increased exchangeability was demonstrated through various methods. Results of X-Ray diffraction analysis verified the transformation of Kaolinite as indicated from disappearing all the diffractogram peaks due to kaolinite. In infra-red spectroscopy, the presence of a broad band with little change in the intensity in the region coupled with broad Si-O bending vibration band and Si-O-Al compound vibration bands explain the extent of structural disorder as a response of modification treatment. From a mineral structural viewpoint, destruction through heat treatment exposes directed –OH bonds located between the tetrahedral and octahedral layers (amorphization). It has been observed that after an acidification treatment, the –OH groups become less stable and lead to the newly formed vacant sites during the modification treatments accommodate extra structural water; thereby; broadening the –OH bands in the I.R spectrum.https://doi.org/10.1515/geo-2019-0041heavy metals removali.r spectroscopymodified kaolinites.e.mwastewater treatment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abdallah Samy
spellingShingle Abdallah Samy
Remediation of Copper and Zinc from wastewater by modified clay in Asir region southwest of Saudi Arabia
Open Geosciences
heavy metals removal
i.r spectroscopy
modified kaolinite
s.e.m
wastewater treatment
author_facet Abdallah Samy
author_sort Abdallah Samy
title Remediation of Copper and Zinc from wastewater by modified clay in Asir region southwest of Saudi Arabia
title_short Remediation of Copper and Zinc from wastewater by modified clay in Asir region southwest of Saudi Arabia
title_full Remediation of Copper and Zinc from wastewater by modified clay in Asir region southwest of Saudi Arabia
title_fullStr Remediation of Copper and Zinc from wastewater by modified clay in Asir region southwest of Saudi Arabia
title_full_unstemmed Remediation of Copper and Zinc from wastewater by modified clay in Asir region southwest of Saudi Arabia
title_sort remediation of copper and zinc from wastewater by modified clay in asir region southwest of saudi arabia
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Geosciences
issn 2391-5447
publishDate 2019-10-01
description To investigate the efficacy of modified clay minerals to remediate heavy metals from industrial wastewater, two natural clay sediments dominated by kaolinite were selected. Since the kaolinite clay has low cation exchange capacity, some modifications were made using unusual treatments thermal transformation and acid activation techniques were used to increase exchangeability properties for producing modified kaolinite. The increased exchangeability was demonstrated through various methods. Results of X-Ray diffraction analysis verified the transformation of Kaolinite as indicated from disappearing all the diffractogram peaks due to kaolinite. In infra-red spectroscopy, the presence of a broad band with little change in the intensity in the region coupled with broad Si-O bending vibration band and Si-O-Al compound vibration bands explain the extent of structural disorder as a response of modification treatment. From a mineral structural viewpoint, destruction through heat treatment exposes directed –OH bonds located between the tetrahedral and octahedral layers (amorphization). It has been observed that after an acidification treatment, the –OH groups become less stable and lead to the newly formed vacant sites during the modification treatments accommodate extra structural water; thereby; broadening the –OH bands in the I.R spectrum.
topic heavy metals removal
i.r spectroscopy
modified kaolinite
s.e.m
wastewater treatment
url https://doi.org/10.1515/geo-2019-0041
work_keys_str_mv AT abdallahsamy remediationofcopperandzincfromwastewaterbymodifiedclayinasirregionsouthwestofsaudiarabia
_version_ 1717784450818899968