A clay-vesicle system for water purification from organic pollutants

Tomas Undabeytia*, Shlomo Nir, Trinidad Sánchez-Verdejo, Jaime Villaverde, Celia Maqueda, Esmeralda Morillo

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

45 Scopus citations

Abstract

Vesicle-clay complexes in which positively charged vesicles composed of didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DDAB) were adsorbed on montmorillonite removed efficiently anionic (sulfentrazone, imazaquin) and neutral (alachlor, atrazine) pollutants from water. These complexes (0.5% w:w) removed 92-100% of sulfentrazone, imazaquin and alachlor and 60% of atrazine from a solution containing 10 mg/L of it. A synergistic effect on the adsorption of atrazine was observed when all pollutants were present simultaneously (30 mg/L each), its percentage of removal being 85.5. Column filters (18 cm) filled with a mixture of quartz sand and vesicle-clay (100:1, w:w) were tested. For the passage of 1 L (25 pore volumes) of a solution including all the pollutants at 10 mg/L each, removal was complete for sulfentrazone and imazaquin, 94% for alachlor and 53.1% for atrazine, whereas removal was significantly less efficient when using activated carbon. A similar advantage of the vesicle-clay filter was observed for the capacities of removal.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1211-1219
Number of pages9
JournalWater Research
Volume42
Issue number4-5
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2008

Keywords

  • Clay
  • Organic pollutants
  • Sand filter
  • Sedimentation
  • Vesicle
  • Water purification

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