This is a demo store. No orders will be fulfilled.

Magnetic-activated carbon composites derived from sludge and steel converter slag for wastewater treatment

Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering [2022]
Qinghui Yu, Guotao Liu, Jinhang Shi, Ting wen, Lei Li
ABSTRACT

It is generally challenging to design efficient, low-cost, and environmentally friendly persulfate catalytic materials for wastewater purification. We report a simple strategy to synthesize a steel converter slag-sludge carbon catalyst with steel converter slag as a template, suspended sludge as a precursor, and one-step pyrolysis . A persulfate activator was used to remove phenol and organic matter from actual wastewater leachate. The catalyst had a shell structure, a large surface area, abundant adsorption groups, and polymetallic catalytic capacity. The catalytic capacity depended on zero-valent iron (Fe 0 ), which effectively leached active Fe 2+ composite to produce hydroxyl and persulfate radicals by activating persulfate. The maximum phenol degradation was 94.5% in 55 min with 2 mM persulfate, 100 mg/L catalyst, and 20 mg/L phenol, which was 6 and 44 times greater than that of pure sludge carbon and steel converter slag, respectively. For actual wastewater leachate, the maximum removal rate of total organic carbon was 77.75% with 0.15 M persulfate, 50 g/L catalyst, and 1125 mg/L total organic carbon; all the fluorescent substances were removed. This work provides a new approach for designing persulfate catalysts derived from green resources. Further, our approach is practical for the treatment of wastewater that has high concentrations of organic material.

MATERIALS

Shall we send you a message when we have discounts available?

Remind me later

Thank you! Please check your email inbox to confirm.

Oops! Notifications are disabled.