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Enhancement of chromate reduction in soils by surface modified biochar

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Enhancement of chromate reduction in soils by surface modified biochar. / Mandal, Sanchita; Sarkar, Binoy; Bolan, Nanthi et al.
In: Journal of Environmental Management, Vol. 186, No. 2, 15.01.2017, p. 277-284.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Mandal, S, Sarkar, B, Bolan, N, Ok, YS & Naidu, R 2017, 'Enhancement of chromate reduction in soils by surface modified biochar', Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 186, no. 2, pp. 277-284. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.05.034

APA

Mandal, S., Sarkar, B., Bolan, N., Ok, Y. S., & Naidu, R. (2017). Enhancement of chromate reduction in soils by surface modified biochar. Journal of Environmental Management, 186(2), 277-284. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.05.034

Vancouver

Mandal S, Sarkar B, Bolan N, Ok YS, Naidu R. Enhancement of chromate reduction in soils by surface modified biochar. Journal of Environmental Management. 2017 Jan 15;186(2):277-284. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.05.034

Author

Mandal, Sanchita ; Sarkar, Binoy ; Bolan, Nanthi et al. / Enhancement of chromate reduction in soils by surface modified biochar. In: Journal of Environmental Management. 2017 ; Vol. 186, No. 2. pp. 277-284.

Bibtex

@article{a7310d66a7344f508731bd51fe77a959,
title = "Enhancement of chromate reduction in soils by surface modified biochar",
abstract = "Chromium (Cr) is one of the common metals present in the soils and may have an extremely deleterious environmental impact depending on its redox state. Among two common forms, trivalent Cr(III) is less toxic than hexavalent Cr(VI) in soils. Carbon (C) based materials including biochar could be used to alleviate Cr toxicity through converting Cr(VI) to Cr(III). Incubation experiments were conducted to examine Cr(VI) reduction in different soils (Soil 1: pH 7.5 and Soil 2: pH 5.5) with three manures from poultry (PM), cow (CM) and sheep (SM), three respective manure-derived biochars (PM biochar (PM-BC), CM biochar (CM-BC) and SM biochar (SM-BC)) and two modified biochars (modified PM-BC (PM-BC-M) and modified SM-BC (SM-BC-M)). Modified biochar was synthesized by incorporating chitosan and zerovalent iron (ZVI) during pyrolysis. Among biochars, highest Cr(VI) reduction was observed with PM-BC application (5%; w/w) (up to 88.12 mg kg−1; 45% reduction) in Soil 2 (pH 5.5). The modified biochars enhanced Cr(VI) reduction by 55% (SM-BC-M) compared to manure (29%, SM) and manure-derived biochars (40% reduction, SM-BC). Among the modified biochars, SM-BC-M showed a higher Cr(VI) reduction rate (55%) than PM-BC-M (48%) in Soil 2. Various oxygen-containing surface functional groups such as phenolic, carboxyl, carbonyl, etc. on biochar surface might act as a proton donor for Cr(VI) reduction and subsequent Cr(III) adsorption. This study underpins the immense potential of modified biochar in remediation of Cr(VI) contaminated soils.",
author = "Sanchita Mandal and Binoy Sarkar and Nanthi Bolan and Ok, {Yong Sik} and Ravi Naidu",
year = "2017",
month = jan,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.05.034",
language = "English",
volume = "186",
pages = "277--284",
journal = "Journal of Environmental Management",
issn = "0301-4797",
publisher = "Academic Press",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Enhancement of chromate reduction in soils by surface modified biochar

AU - Mandal, Sanchita

AU - Sarkar, Binoy

AU - Bolan, Nanthi

AU - Ok, Yong Sik

AU - Naidu, Ravi

PY - 2017/1/15

Y1 - 2017/1/15

N2 - Chromium (Cr) is one of the common metals present in the soils and may have an extremely deleterious environmental impact depending on its redox state. Among two common forms, trivalent Cr(III) is less toxic than hexavalent Cr(VI) in soils. Carbon (C) based materials including biochar could be used to alleviate Cr toxicity through converting Cr(VI) to Cr(III). Incubation experiments were conducted to examine Cr(VI) reduction in different soils (Soil 1: pH 7.5 and Soil 2: pH 5.5) with three manures from poultry (PM), cow (CM) and sheep (SM), three respective manure-derived biochars (PM biochar (PM-BC), CM biochar (CM-BC) and SM biochar (SM-BC)) and two modified biochars (modified PM-BC (PM-BC-M) and modified SM-BC (SM-BC-M)). Modified biochar was synthesized by incorporating chitosan and zerovalent iron (ZVI) during pyrolysis. Among biochars, highest Cr(VI) reduction was observed with PM-BC application (5%; w/w) (up to 88.12 mg kg−1; 45% reduction) in Soil 2 (pH 5.5). The modified biochars enhanced Cr(VI) reduction by 55% (SM-BC-M) compared to manure (29%, SM) and manure-derived biochars (40% reduction, SM-BC). Among the modified biochars, SM-BC-M showed a higher Cr(VI) reduction rate (55%) than PM-BC-M (48%) in Soil 2. Various oxygen-containing surface functional groups such as phenolic, carboxyl, carbonyl, etc. on biochar surface might act as a proton donor for Cr(VI) reduction and subsequent Cr(III) adsorption. This study underpins the immense potential of modified biochar in remediation of Cr(VI) contaminated soils.

AB - Chromium (Cr) is one of the common metals present in the soils and may have an extremely deleterious environmental impact depending on its redox state. Among two common forms, trivalent Cr(III) is less toxic than hexavalent Cr(VI) in soils. Carbon (C) based materials including biochar could be used to alleviate Cr toxicity through converting Cr(VI) to Cr(III). Incubation experiments were conducted to examine Cr(VI) reduction in different soils (Soil 1: pH 7.5 and Soil 2: pH 5.5) with three manures from poultry (PM), cow (CM) and sheep (SM), three respective manure-derived biochars (PM biochar (PM-BC), CM biochar (CM-BC) and SM biochar (SM-BC)) and two modified biochars (modified PM-BC (PM-BC-M) and modified SM-BC (SM-BC-M)). Modified biochar was synthesized by incorporating chitosan and zerovalent iron (ZVI) during pyrolysis. Among biochars, highest Cr(VI) reduction was observed with PM-BC application (5%; w/w) (up to 88.12 mg kg−1; 45% reduction) in Soil 2 (pH 5.5). The modified biochars enhanced Cr(VI) reduction by 55% (SM-BC-M) compared to manure (29%, SM) and manure-derived biochars (40% reduction, SM-BC). Among the modified biochars, SM-BC-M showed a higher Cr(VI) reduction rate (55%) than PM-BC-M (48%) in Soil 2. Various oxygen-containing surface functional groups such as phenolic, carboxyl, carbonyl, etc. on biochar surface might act as a proton donor for Cr(VI) reduction and subsequent Cr(III) adsorption. This study underpins the immense potential of modified biochar in remediation of Cr(VI) contaminated soils.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.05.034

DO - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.05.034

M3 - Journal article

VL - 186

SP - 277

EP - 284

JO - Journal of Environmental Management

JF - Journal of Environmental Management

SN - 0301-4797

IS - 2

ER -