TY - JOUR
T1 - Enhancing the selective ciprofloxacin adsorption in urine matrices through the metal-doping of carbon sorbents
AU - Ersan, Gamze
AU - dos Santos, Alexsando J.
AU - Lanza, Marcos R.V.
AU - Perreault, Francois
AU - Garcia-Segura, Sergi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023
PY - 2023/12/15
Y1 - 2023/12/15
N2 - Pharmaceuticals excreted after administration can pollute water sources given their ineffective removal in conventional wastewater treatment plant. Among the techniques used during tertiary wastewater treatment, adsorption is an effective and cost-efficient method for removing antibiotics. This study aimed to investigate the adsorption of ciprofloxacin (CIP) on metal-doped granular activated carbon (GAC) and evaluate the impact of urine on CIP adsorption for pristine, pre-oxidized, and metal-doped GAC. The results showed that the uptake of CIP by iron (Fe)-doped GAC was higher than Ag-doped, pre-oxidized, and pristine GAC in single-solute isotherms (DI water). This higher uptake was attributed to the presence of Fe content (1.2%) on the carbon surface, which can strongly interact with zwitterionic CIP at a neutral pH. However, when synthetic human urine was introduced, the adsorption of CIP was negatively affected due to pore blockage and competition for available sorption sites on the GAC. Among the four types of GACs tested, the lowest reduction in CIP uptake in the urine solution was observed for Fe-doped GAC followed (%17) by pre-oxidized (64%), Ag-doped (%69), and pristine F400 (76%) carbon. These results suggested that the complexation between CIP and Fe-doped GAC in urine was stronger due to its higher functionalization compared to Ag-doped, pre-oxidized, and pristine GAC. As the equilibrium concentration of CIP increased, the competition between CIP and urine decreased on the surface of Fe-doped carbon, owing to the limited competition from urine for the available active sorption sites.
AB - Pharmaceuticals excreted after administration can pollute water sources given their ineffective removal in conventional wastewater treatment plant. Among the techniques used during tertiary wastewater treatment, adsorption is an effective and cost-efficient method for removing antibiotics. This study aimed to investigate the adsorption of ciprofloxacin (CIP) on metal-doped granular activated carbon (GAC) and evaluate the impact of urine on CIP adsorption for pristine, pre-oxidized, and metal-doped GAC. The results showed that the uptake of CIP by iron (Fe)-doped GAC was higher than Ag-doped, pre-oxidized, and pristine GAC in single-solute isotherms (DI water). This higher uptake was attributed to the presence of Fe content (1.2%) on the carbon surface, which can strongly interact with zwitterionic CIP at a neutral pH. However, when synthetic human urine was introduced, the adsorption of CIP was negatively affected due to pore blockage and competition for available sorption sites on the GAC. Among the four types of GACs tested, the lowest reduction in CIP uptake in the urine solution was observed for Fe-doped GAC followed (%17) by pre-oxidized (64%), Ag-doped (%69), and pristine F400 (76%) carbon. These results suggested that the complexation between CIP and Fe-doped GAC in urine was stronger due to its higher functionalization compared to Ag-doped, pre-oxidized, and pristine GAC. As the equilibrium concentration of CIP increased, the competition between CIP and urine decreased on the surface of Fe-doped carbon, owing to the limited competition from urine for the available active sorption sites.
KW - Adsorption
KW - Antibiotics
KW - Granular activated carbon
KW - Metal-doped carbons
KW - Synthetic human urine
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.119298
DO - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.119298
M3 - Article
C2 - 37839202
AN - SCOPUS:85173584058
SN - 0301-4797
VL - 348
JO - Journal of Environmental Management
JF - Journal of Environmental Management
M1 - 119298
ER -