doctoralThesis
Remoção de metais pesados em efluentes sintéticos utilizando vermiculita como adsorvente
Fecha
2010-08-17Registro en:
SILVA, Roberta Pereira da. Remoção de metais pesados em efluentes sintéticos utilizando
vermiculita como adsorvente. 2010. 101 f. Tese (Doutorado em Processamento de Materiais a partir do Pó; Polímeros e Compósitos; Processamento de Materiais a part) - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2010.
Autor
Silva, Roberta Pereira da
Resumen
Heavy metals are used in many industrial processestheirs discard can harm fel effects to
the environment, becoming a serious problem. Many methods used for wastewater
treatment have been reported in the literature, but many of them have high cost and low
efficiency. The adsorption process has been used as effective for the metal remoal ions.
This paper presents studies to evaluate the adsorption capacity of vermiculite as
adsorbent for the heavy metals removal in a synthetic solution. The mineral vermiculite
was characterized by differents techniques: specific surface area analysis by BET
method, X-ray diffraction, raiosX fluorescence, spectroscopy in the infraredd region of,
laser particle size analysis and specific gravity. The physical characteristics of the
material presented was appropriate for the study of adsorption. The adsorption
experiments weredriveal finite bath metod in synthetic solutions of copper, nickel,
cadmium, lead and zinc. The results showed that the vermiculite has a high potential for
adsorption, removing about 100% of ions and with removal capacity values about 85
ppm of metal in solution, 8.09 mg / g for cadmium, 8.39 mg/g for copper, 8.40 mg/g for
lead, 8.26 mg/g for zinc and 8.38 mg/g of nickel. The experimental data fit in the
Langmuir and Freundlich models. The kinetic datas showed a good correlation with the
pseudo-second order model. It was conducteas a competition study among the metals
using vermiculiti a adsorbent. Results showed that the presence of various metals in
solution does not influence their removal at low concentrations, removing approximat
wasely 100 % of all metals present in solutions