Abstract

The use of lanthanum (La)-based materials for phosphate removal from water has received increasing attention. However, challenges remain to enhance phosphate (P) sorption capacities and remove P at low concentrations. In this study, lanthanum modified zeolite materials loaded with different lanthanum types were synthesized by hydrothermal method. Based upon preliminary screening of synthesized La-modified zeolite materials in terms of phosphate sorption capacity and La content, lanthanum chloride-modified zeolite (LZ) is chosen for further study. Specifically, for these materials, phosphate sorption kinetics and isotherm behavior, and solution matrix effects (solution pH, and ionic strength) are reported. The developed LZ has a high sorption capacity of 124.38 mg/g, which exceeds that of most La-based adsorbents currently available. P uptake by LZ was pH-dependent with the highest sorption capacities observed over a pH range of 3 ∼ 9. The presence of coexisting ions (Cl-, SO42-, HCO3–) does not significantly affect the adsorption capacity of LZ. In a real treated wastewater effluent with phosphate concentration of 1.92 mg/L and 0.155 mg/L, 0.1 g/L and 0.01 g/L of LZ efficiently reduced the phosphate concentration to below 0.01 mg P/L. Electrostatic attraction and inner-sphere complexation were identified as the sorption mechanisms of phosphate by LZ. The acute toxicity test confirms that the addition of LZ has no acute toxicity effect on aquatic organisms. However, LZ shows indirect and direct inhibitory effects on algae growth, which is beneficial for the control of eutrophic water. Moreover, the exhausted LZ can be easily regenerated with over 70 % adsorption capacity remained during five recycles. Overall, LZ shows great application potential, and this work provides new insights into the molecular-level mechanism of phosphate sequestration by LZ.

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