Arsenic Adsorption on Lanthanum-Impregnated Activated Alumina: Spectroscopic and DFT Study

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2015 Dec 9;7(48):26735-41. doi: 10.1021/acsami.5b08730. Epub 2015 Nov 23.

Abstract

Rare earth-modified adsorbents (REMAs) have been widely used to remove oxyanion pollutants from water, including arsenic (As). However, the molecular-level structural information and reactions at the liquid/solid interface are still murky, which limits the design of applicable REMAs. Herein, a lanthanum-impregnated activated alumina (LAA) was synthesized as a representative REMA, and its As uptake mechanisms were explored using multiple complementary characterization techniques. Our adsorption experiments showed that LAA exhibited 2-3 times higher As adsorption capacity than AA. In contrast to the bidentate configuration formed on most metal oxide surfaces, our EXAFS and DFT results suggest that As(III) and As(V) form monodentate surface complexes on LAA through As-O-La coordinative bonding. In situ flow cell ATR-FTIR observed a strong dependence of As-O peak positions on pH, which could be interpreted as the change in the fractions of As(V) surface complexes with zero- to double-protonation on LAA, AA, and LaOOH. As(V) on LAA existed as singly and doubly protonated surface species, and the pKa of transition from double to single protonation (∼5.8) was lower than that for its soluble counterpart (6.97). The surface reaction and structural configuration were incorporated in a CD-MUSIC model to satisfactorily predict macroscopic As adsorption behaviors. The insights gained from the molecular-level reactions shed light on the design and application of REMAs in environmental remediation for As and its structural analogues.

Keywords: adsorption; arsenic; coordination modes; lanthanum; surface chemistry.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't