This study addressed manganese removal from mine waters
in a stirred
tank as well as fixed-bed experiments. Manganese sorption on limestone
is described by pseudo first-order kinetics. Equilibrium sorption
was modeled by the Langmuir isotherm, and limestone showed maximum
manganese uptakes ranging from 0.92 mg/g in the absence of sulfate
to 1.08 mg/g in the presence of 600 mg/L of the species. Fixed-bed
testing showed limestone uptakes that increased with the flow rate
at low manganese concentration (1.5 mg/L) but decreased for mine water
containing 15 mgMn/L. The Thomas model was fitted to breakthrough
curves to determine the characteristic design parameters of the column.
The maximum uptake was 46.85 mg/L-bed for a 15 mg/L manganese solution
at 1 mL/min, and sulfate did not affect the manganese sorption. The
solid residues obtained during the removal process were characterized,
and the presence of manganese carbonate (MnCO3) on the
limestone surface was confirmed by IR during the experiments with
mine water.
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