Nanoscale structural/chemical characterization of manganese oxide surface layers and nanoparticles, and the associated implications for drinking water

Water treatment facilities commonly reduce soluble contaminants, such as soluble manganese (Mn2+), in water by oxidation and subsequent filtration. Previous studies have shown that conventional porous filter system removes Mn2+ from drinking water by developing Mn-oxides (MnOx(s)) bearing coating la...

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Main Author: Vargas Vallejo, Michel Eduardo
Other Authors: Materials Science and Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64514
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-645142021-11-02T05:34:59Z Nanoscale structural/chemical characterization of manganese oxide surface layers and nanoparticles, and the associated implications for drinking water Vargas Vallejo, Michel Eduardo Materials Science and Engineering Murayama, Mitsuhiro Corcoran, Sean G. Reynolds, William T. Jr. Knocke, William R. Michel, Frederick Marc Water Filtration MnOx(s) Coating Nanomaterial Characterization Water treatment facilities commonly reduce soluble contaminants, such as soluble manganese (Mn2+), in water by oxidation and subsequent filtration. Previous studies have shown that conventional porous filter system removes Mn2+ from drinking water by developing Mn-oxides (MnOx(s)) bearing coating layers on the surface of filter media. Multiple models have been developed to explain this Mn2+ removal process and the formation mechanism of MnOx(s) coatings. Both, experimental and theoretical studies to date have been largely focused on the micrometer to millimeter scale range; whereas, coating layers are composed of nanoscale particles and films. Hence, understanding the nanoscale particle and film formation mechanisms is essential to comprehend the complexity of soluble contaminant removal processes. The primary objective of this study was to understand the initial MnOx(s) coating formation mechanisms and evaluate the influence of filter media characteristics on these processes. We pursued this objective by characterizing at the micro and nanoscale MnOx(s) coatings developed on different filter media by bench-scale column tests with simulating inorganic aqueous chemistry of a typical coagulation fresh water treatment plant, where free chlorine is present across filter bed. Analytical SEM and TEM, powder and synchrotron-based XRD, XPS, and ICPMS were used for characterization of coatings, filter media and water solution elemental chemistry. A secondary objective was to model how surface coating formation occurred and its correlation with experimentally observed physical characteristics. This modeling exercise indicates that surface roughness and morphology of filtering media are the major contributing factors in surface coating formation process. Contrary to previous models that assumed a uniform distribution and growth of surface coating, the experimental results showed that greater amounts of coating were developed in rougher areas. At the very early stage of coating formation, unevenly distributed thin films and/or particle aggregates were observed, which provided active sites for further surface coating growth. The predominant MnOx(s) phase in the surface coatings was identified to be poorly crystalline birnessite having scavenging activity by intercalation and/or sorption. This would explain the enhancement of efficiency in removing soluble manganese and other contaminants during water filtration. Moreover, the increased Mn2+ removal effect of having aluminum (Al) in pre-treated water is explained. These results indicate that the surface roughness and morphology need to be incorporated into particle capture models to more precisely describe the soluble manganese removal process. Ph. D. 2016-01-29T09:00:35Z 2016-01-29T09:00:35Z 2016-01-28 Dissertation vt_gsexam:6423 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64514 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Water Filtration
MnOx(s) Coating
Nanomaterial
Characterization
spellingShingle Water Filtration
MnOx(s) Coating
Nanomaterial
Characterization
Vargas Vallejo, Michel Eduardo
Nanoscale structural/chemical characterization of manganese oxide surface layers and nanoparticles, and the associated implications for drinking water
description Water treatment facilities commonly reduce soluble contaminants, such as soluble manganese (Mn2+), in water by oxidation and subsequent filtration. Previous studies have shown that conventional porous filter system removes Mn2+ from drinking water by developing Mn-oxides (MnOx(s)) bearing coating layers on the surface of filter media. Multiple models have been developed to explain this Mn2+ removal process and the formation mechanism of MnOx(s) coatings. Both, experimental and theoretical studies to date have been largely focused on the micrometer to millimeter scale range; whereas, coating layers are composed of nanoscale particles and films. Hence, understanding the nanoscale particle and film formation mechanisms is essential to comprehend the complexity of soluble contaminant removal processes. The primary objective of this study was to understand the initial MnOx(s) coating formation mechanisms and evaluate the influence of filter media characteristics on these processes. We pursued this objective by characterizing at the micro and nanoscale MnOx(s) coatings developed on different filter media by bench-scale column tests with simulating inorganic aqueous chemistry of a typical coagulation fresh water treatment plant, where free chlorine is present across filter bed. Analytical SEM and TEM, powder and synchrotron-based XRD, XPS, and ICPMS were used for characterization of coatings, filter media and water solution elemental chemistry. A secondary objective was to model how surface coating formation occurred and its correlation with experimentally observed physical characteristics. This modeling exercise indicates that surface roughness and morphology of filtering media are the major contributing factors in surface coating formation process. Contrary to previous models that assumed a uniform distribution and growth of surface coating, the experimental results showed that greater amounts of coating were developed in rougher areas. At the very early stage of coating formation, unevenly distributed thin films and/or particle aggregates were observed, which provided active sites for further surface coating growth. The predominant MnOx(s) phase in the surface coatings was identified to be poorly crystalline birnessite having scavenging activity by intercalation and/or sorption. This would explain the enhancement of efficiency in removing soluble manganese and other contaminants during water filtration. Moreover, the increased Mn2+ removal effect of having aluminum (Al) in pre-treated water is explained. These results indicate that the surface roughness and morphology need to be incorporated into particle capture models to more precisely describe the soluble manganese removal process. === Ph. D.
author2 Materials Science and Engineering
author_facet Materials Science and Engineering
Vargas Vallejo, Michel Eduardo
author Vargas Vallejo, Michel Eduardo
author_sort Vargas Vallejo, Michel Eduardo
title Nanoscale structural/chemical characterization of manganese oxide surface layers and nanoparticles, and the associated implications for drinking water
title_short Nanoscale structural/chemical characterization of manganese oxide surface layers and nanoparticles, and the associated implications for drinking water
title_full Nanoscale structural/chemical characterization of manganese oxide surface layers and nanoparticles, and the associated implications for drinking water
title_fullStr Nanoscale structural/chemical characterization of manganese oxide surface layers and nanoparticles, and the associated implications for drinking water
title_full_unstemmed Nanoscale structural/chemical characterization of manganese oxide surface layers and nanoparticles, and the associated implications for drinking water
title_sort nanoscale structural/chemical characterization of manganese oxide surface layers and nanoparticles, and the associated implications for drinking water
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64514
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