Modeling Trichloroethylene
Adsorption by Activated Carbon
Preloaded with Natural Dissolved
Organic Matter Using a Modified
IAST Approach†
Posted on 2004-11-15 - 00:00
A model was developed, using an approach based on the
Ideal Adsorbed Solution Theory (IAST), to predict
trichloroethylene (TCE) adsorption by granular activated
carbon (GAC) preloaded with natural dissolved organic matter
(DOM) isolated from three surface water sources. The
IAST model was formulated for a bi-solute system in which
TCE and DOM single-solute uptakes were described by
the Langmuir−Freundlich and Freundlich isotherms,
respectively. The effect of DOM molecular size and polarity
(as measured by XAD 8 resin fractionation) on TCE
uptake by preloaded GAC was assessed to identify a
reactive fraction of natural water DOM for the purpose of
modeling competitive adsorption. Consistent with previous
work that identified low molecular weight species as the
most reactive with regard to preloading effects (i.e., reducing
target compound uptake), the low molecular weight
components of the polar (hydrophilic) and nonpolar
(hydrophobic) DOM fractions, isolated using ultrafiltration
(1 kDa molecular weight cutoff membrane), exhibited
significant competitive effects. Furthermore, the effects of
these fractions on TCE uptake were similar; therefore,
they were considered together to represent a single “reactive
fraction” of DOM. On the basis of this finding, isotherms
for the <1 kDa low molecular weight DOM fraction of the
whole water were measured, and molar concentrations
were computed based on an average molecular weight
determined using size-exclusion chromatography. The IAST
model was modified to incorporate surface area reduction
due to pore blockage by DOM and to reflect the hypothesis
that TCE molecules can access adsorption sites which humic
molecules cannot, thus preventing competition on these
sites. The model was calibrated with data for TCE uptake
by carbon preloaded with the <1 kDa low molecular
weight DOM fraction and was verified by predicting TCE
uptake by carbon preloaded with whole natural waters for
both constant GAC dose (hence constant DOM loading)
and variable GAC dose (hence variable DOM loading) TCE
isotherms. Preloading by DOM reduced volume in GAC
pores having widths smaller than 1.25 nm (likely accessible
only to TCE) to a greater extent than total pore volume,
suggesting preferential blockage of micropores. Such
preferential pore blockage may explain, in part, why increased
DOM loading decreases the fraction of the total surface
area on which no competition between TCE and DOM occurs.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Wigton, Andrew; Kilduff, James E. (2016). Modeling Trichloroethylene
Adsorption by Activated Carbon
Preloaded with Natural Dissolved
Organic Matter Using a Modified
IAST Approach†. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/es049676a