/AnMtgsAbsts2009.53086 Kinetics of Phosphorus Removal by Industrial by-Products.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009: 2:00 PM
Convention Center, Room 328, Third Floor

Dustin Stoner1, Chad Penn1 and Joshua McGrath2, (1)Plant and Soil Science, Oklahoma State Univ., Stillwater, OK
(2)0214 H.J. Patterson Hall, Bldg. 073, Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD
Abstract:
Use of industrial by-products as phosphorus (P) sorbing materials (PSMs) is of great interest for directly removing P from wastewaters, drainage water, and surface runoff.  In order to properly design an effective structure for removing P from solution, it is first necessary to quantify the amount and rate of P sorption.  The purpose of this study was to quantify P sorption rate onto several industrial by-products using a flow-through approach.  Several PSMs were characterized for properties affecting P sorption, such as Fe, Al, and Ca concentrations and forms, pH, and electrical conductivity.  Five solution P concentrations were passed through PSMs at five different flow rates.  Outflow concentrations were monitored at various time intervals for five hours.  The cumulative P sorbed as function of P added was estimated for each flow rate and concentration; maximum P sorbed for each combination was estimated using the Langmuir model.  Phosphorus sorption rates will be discussed in the context of PSM properties.