Abstract

Effective and economically viable method to remove elevated metal(loid)s from farm and industrial lands remains a major challenge. In this study, magnetic biochar-based adsorbents with Fe3O4 particles embedded in a porous biochar matrix was synthesized via iron (Fe) treated biochar or thermal pyrolysis of Fe treated cedar sawdust. Application and separation of the adsorbent to a multi-contaminated soil slurry simultaneously removed 20–30% of arsenic, cadmium and lead within 24 h. Fast removal of multi-metal(loid)s result from the decrease in all operationally defined fractions of metal(loid)s, not limited to the exchangeable fraction. The direct removal of arsenic-enriched soil particles was observed via micro X-ray fluorescence maps. Furthermore, through comparison of biochars with different production methods, it has been found that magnetization after pyrolysis treatment leads to stronger metals/metalloids adsorption with a higher qe (bound sorbate) than other treatments but pyrolysis after magnetization stabilized Fe oxides on the biochar surface, indicating a higher biochar recovery rate (∼65%), and thus a higher metal(loid)s removal efficiency. The stability of Fe oxides on the surface of biochar is the determining factor for the removal efficiency of metal(loid)s from soil.

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