Journal of Hazardous Materials, Vol.260, 451-458, 2013
Desorption of arsenic from exhaust activated carbons used for water purification
This work aims to the analysis of arsenic desorption from an exhaust activated carbon used for the purification of a natural water. This last was used to mimic the properties of common groundwater or drinking water. Different low-cost and harmless eluting solutions were considered, including distilled water, natural water, saline (NaCl, CaCl2 and NaNO3) and basic (NaOH) solutions. Experimental results showed that, for 1 g of activated carbon with arsenic loading close to the maximum value available for the model natural water (omega approximate to 0.1 mg/g), it is possible to recover more than 80% of the arsenic using 20 ml of 0.1 M sodium chloride solution. A temperature variation within 20 and 40 degrees C has scarce effect on desorption efficiency. A comparison between desorption data and adsorption isotherms data suggests that arsenic adsorption is actually a reversible process. Therefore, it is virtually possible to increase arsenic recovery efficiency close to 100% by increasing the NaCl concentration or the volume of the desorption solution, but a preliminary cost benefit analysis lead to consider a NaCl 0.1 M solution as an optimal solution for practical applications (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.