Methods:
Phosphate Solution:
- 1 mL of 75% H
3PO
4 was added to a 50 mL beaker containing 50mL of water (sol'n A)
- solid NaOH was added to sol'n A until pH was 7.8
- ~10 mL of sol'n A was added to ~90 mL of artificial saltwater in a small reagent bottle
- A white precipitate formed immediately upon the addition of sol'n A (likely Ca
3(PO
4)
2)
- The precipitate settled and the supernatent was decanted (sol'n B). The precipitate was discarded
- The solution was diluted 1111 times and tested for PO
4 using an API test kit. The determined PO
4 concentration of sol'n B was 2222 mg/L
Saturation of GFO w/ PO
4
- 6 g (10mL) of PhosBGone pelletized GFO (by Fine FilterAquatics) was placed into two 125 mL Erlenmeyer flasks.
- 25 mL of solution sol'n B was added to each Erlenmeyer flask containing GFO and lightly swirled periodically
- After 30 min., the liquid was decanted from each flask and discarded
- The GFO was rinsed with 125 mL of water followed by three 25 mL rinses
Acid Regeneration:
- 5 mL of glacial acetic acid was added to 95 mL of water (sol'n C)
- 25 mL of sol'n C was added to one of the flasks containing the GFO and lightly swirled periodically
- After 1 hr., the solution was decanted from the flask
- The decanted solution was diluted 11x with tap water
- A 5 mL sample of the decanted sol'n was taken and 5 drops of API High Range Test Kit was added. The pH was adjusted upwards with a NaOH sol'n (5g/100mL) until the last drop increased the pH to >8.8. The number of drops was counted and recorded.
- A new 5 mL sample of the decanted solution was taken and the pH was adjusted upwards with the same number of drops of the NaOH sol'n as previously determined.
- This sample was then tested for PO
4 with an API test kit.
- Another 25 mL of sol'n C was added to the flask containing the GFO for an overnight soak to determine if additional PO
4 can be extracted from the GFO
Base Regeneration:
- 5 g of NaOH was added to 100 mL of water (sol'n D)
- 25 mL of sol'n D was added to one of the flasks containing the GFO and lightly swirled periodically
- After 1 hr., the solution was decanted from the flask
- The decanted solution was diluted 101x with tap water
- A 5 mL sample of the decanted sol'n was taken and 5 drops of API High Range Test Kit was added. The pH was adjusted downwards with an Acetic Acid sol'n (5% v/v) until the last drop decreased the pH to <7.4. The number of drops

was counted and recorded.
- A new 5 mL sample of the decanted solution was taken and the pH was adjusted downwards with (n-1) drops of the NaOH sol'n
- This sample was then tested for PO
4 with an API test kit.
- Another 25 mL of sol'n D was added to the flask containing the GFO for an overnight soak to determine if additional PO
4 can be extracted from the GFO
Preliminary Results
- The PO
4 concentration of the acid regeneration solution was not noticable different from that of the blank sample
- The PO
4 concentration of the base regeneration solution was ~400 mg/L
Preliminary conclusions:
Acid regeneration using vinegar does not appear that it will work adequately. The PO
4 concentration of the 11x diluted sample was not noticably different from the blank. I used tap water to dilute the sample which in retrospect was a mistake because the tap water had a PO4 concentration of about 1 ppm. I used tap water because I didn't think the prescence of PO
4 in the dilution tap water would matter much because I expected the PO4 concentration of the sample to far exceed that of the tap water. My previous finding of PO
4 was probably the result of PO
4 in the vinegar as I foolishly did not test a blank on the vinegar solution. Also, I previously did not dilute the vinegar solution, so very minor desorption of PO
4 could easily yield an "off the charts" result. I guess at an acidic pH the surface charge of the GFO is positive and keeps the PO
4 bound (?), despite the dissolution of the GFO surface. I had thought that under acidic conditions the dissolution would be great enough to prevent PO4 from remaining bound. Sorry for the incorrect information guys. I was a little too hasty and not nearly thorough enough in my original evaluation of acid as a regeneration solution. I'll see if the prolonged overnight soak will make a difference, but at this point I am doubtful
The good news is that the NaOH regeneration process seemed to work well with only a 1 hr soak and a ~1 M concentration. I'll test the second round of regeneration solutions tommorow to verify that the GFO had been effectively stripped from the GFO and then I'll investigate if the GFO's ability to bind phosphate after being regenerated.
In the "Regeneration" and "Results" picture I attached, the acetic acid regeneration solition is on the left and the NaOH regeneration solution is on the right.
Scott