Abstract

Black carbon (BC), especially biochar, is a potential material for the remediation of hydrophobic organic compounds (HOCs) pollution in soils and sediments. Recent studies have reported that the adsorption capability of BC in sediment was reduced as time increased. It was hypothesised that this behaviour was caused by the presence of natural organic matter (NOM), but few systematic studies have examined the influence of NOM on the sorption ability of BC in sediment (S). The results of this study revealed that a humic acid (HA) coating changed the surface properties, blocked the micropores, and decreased the sorption capacity of rice-straw biochar (RBC) towards pentachlorophenol. With increasing aging time, the reductions in the sorption capacity of the S+RBC and S+HA+RBC systems occurred more rapidly than in the S+HA/RBC (HA-coated RBC) system, and the sorption curves became closer to that of the S+HA/RBC system, indicating that HA may play a primary role in reducing the sorption capacity of RBC in the sediment. With higher HA contents, the sorption capacity of the complex sediments was lower and decreased more rapidly.

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