Abstract

Comparative studies were carried out on the adsorption of copper by a range of laboratory-cultured algae and freshwater phytoplankton samples. The level of surface mucilage associated with the cultured algae ranged from high (Anabaena spiroides, Eudorina elegans) to moderate (Anabaena cylindrica, Microcystis aeruginosa) to complete absence (Chlorella vulgaris, Asterionella formosa, Aulacoseira varians, Ceratium hirundinella). With laboratory cultures, the rapid uptake, EDTA release and quantitative similarity between living and dead (glutaraldehyde-fixed) algae were consistent with physical binding of Cu at the cell surface. The higher Cu adsorption per unit surface area and longer adsorption time of mucilaginous algae in the time-course study, and the relatively high level of Cu bound to mucilage found by X-ray microanalysis suggest that mucilage played an important role in metal binding. For all species examined, Cu adsorption kinetics (external Cu concentrations 1 to 1000 mg L−1) showed a clear fit to the Freundlich, but not the Langmuir isotherm, indicating a monolayer adsorption model with heterogenous binding sites. The Freundlich adsorption capacity constant (Kf) was higher in mucilaginous (3.96–12.62) compared to nonmucilaginous (0.36–3.63) species, but binding intensity (Freundlich constant 1/n) did not differ between the two cell types. The results suggest that mucilaginous algal species may have potential as biosorbents for treatment of industrial effluents containing heavy metals. Investigation of the Cu adsorption behavior of four mixed phytoplankton samples also revealed a good fit to the Freundlich, but not the Langmuir, isotherm. Freundlich constants were in the range 2.3–3.2 for samples dominated by Chlorophyta, Bacillariophyta and Cyanophyta, but recorded a value of 7.4 in the sample dominated by Dinophyta. Comparison with data from laboratory monocultures suggested that the adsorption kinetics of mixed environmental phytoplankton samples cannot be predicted simply in terms of the major algal species.

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