Abstract

Various human activities have led to multiple contamination of natural water systems. The present study investigated the effect of a novel multifunctional biochar to treat nutrients, oil, and harmful algae in water. Specifically, magnesium (Mg) and biosurfactant rhamnolipid (RL) were incorporated into biochar, including Mg-biochar, RL-biochar, and Mg-RL-biochar. Their adsorption efficiency on phosphate and total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) was evaluated in separate batch studies. Also, the inhibition effect of RL-modified biochars on cyanobacteria was investigated. The results showed that Mg-impregnated biochar showed high adsorption capacity on phosphate (118 mg g−1), while RL-modified biochar significantly reduced TPH (especially aromatic and light aliphatic fraction) with adsorption capacity of 44.4 mg g−1. The inhibition effects of biochar composites on algae in water without contaminants were in order of Mg-RL-biochar > RL-biochar > biochar with biomass reduction ranging 61–64%. Overall, Mg-RL-biochar was suggested based on this study due to its ability to remove PO43− and TPH, and inhibit the growth of toxic algae.Graphical abstract

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