Utilizing of Mushrooms as an Effective Biosorbent ...
बनाया गया: 20 अप्रैल 2025
बनाया गया: 20 अप्रैल 2025
Utilizing of Mushrooms as an Effective Biosorbent resin for Removal Vanadium Species from Aqueous Solutions
Below is a compact primer you can use as a starting point for a seminar‑talk, grant proposal, or experimental design on using mushrooms (fruit‑body, mycelium, or spent‑substrate–derived biochar) as biosorbents for removing vanadium species from water. Citations are given so you can pull the original papers for full details.
Item | Key points |
---|---|
Environmental concern | Vanadium(V) occurs as mobile oxy‑anions (H₂VO₄⁻, HVO₄²⁻, V₁₀O₂₈⁶⁻, etc.) that are toxic above ~50 µg L⁻¹ and common in steel‑making, mining, oil‑combustion and battery industries. |
Limits | Many jurisdictions now propose discharge limits ≤ 50 µg L⁻¹; Polish regulations already set 0.05 mg L⁻¹ for surface waters. ResearchGate |
Why biosorption? | Low‑cost solids, no sludge chemicals, good selectivity after surface tuning, and the sorbent itself is a waste stream. |
Component | Functional groups that bind vanadate |
---|---|
Chitin / chitosan | –NH₃⁺ (protonated amine) for anion exchange, –OH for ligand exchange SpringerOpen |
β‑Glucans & proteins | carboxyl‑, phosphate‑, phenolic‑OH groups (complexation, hydrogen bonding) ✔ |
Porous skeleton | 50–400 m² g⁻¹ after pyrolysis to biochar → more sites + faster kinetics ResearchGate |
At pH 1‑3 the biomass surface is strongly protonated, giving it a net positive charge ideally suited for electrostatic attraction of VO₃⁻/H₂VO₄⁻. Above pH ~6 both the sorbent (de‑protonated carboxylates) and vanadate (divalent anion) carry negative charge and capacity collapses – a point to remember for column operation.
Mushroom‑derived sorbent | Operating pH & T | Initial V(V) (mg L⁻¹) | q<sub>max</sub> (mg g⁻¹) | Notes / Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
SMS biochar (BC3) from oyster‑mushroom farm‑waste | 3.0 / 25 °C | 50 | ≈1.0 mg g⁻¹ (Langmuir); pseudo‑2nd‑order kinetics; 80 % removal in 90 min ResearchGate | |
Live Pleurotus ostreatus mycelial pellets | 2.5 | 20 | 4.5–6 | Living uptake + bioaccumulation (older, but shows mechanism) SpringerOpen |
Composite fungal membrane (Pleurotus mycelium + bacterial cellulose) | 2–6 | 10 | 18–22 | Regenerable with 0.1 M NaOH, 5 % loss after 4 cycles ScienceDirect |
Mycelium loaded with nano‑polystyrene to pre‑complex vanadate (“nPS‑P. ostreatus”) | 3 | 30 | 12 | Nanoplastics raise surface‑area & electron‑rich sites – study explores reuse as V‑based battery cathode ScienceDirect |
Take‑home: raw biomass works, but thermal (≤700 °C) or chemical modification generally multiplies capacity by 2‑20× and improves mechanical stability for packed beds.
Variable | Practical window | Rationale |
---|---|---|
pH | 1.5 – 3.5 for V(V); 3–5 for V(IV) | Maximises electrostatic attraction of anionic vanadate while avoiding dissolution of chitin. |
Contact time | 30–120 min (batch); EBCT = 3–10 min (columns) | Pseudo‑second‑order chemisorption dominates. |
Competing anions | PO₄³⁻ ≫ SO₄²⁻ ≈ NO₃⁻ interference. Pre‑acidify or use Ca/Fe‑impregnated biochar to restore selectivity. | |
Temperature | Endothermic; 5–10 % ↑ in q<sub>max</sub> when going from 20 → 40 °C. | |
Regeneration | 0.1–0.2 M NaOH or 0.05 M Na₃PO₄ desorbs 85–95 %; capacity loss ≤ 10 % over 3–5 cycles. |
Feel free to let me know if you’d like deeper detail on kinetics modelling, fixed‑bed design equations, or a side‑by‑side cost comparison with commercial anion‑exchange resins.