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Article

Adsorption Behavior and Mechanism for the Uptake of Fluoride Ions by Reed Residues

1
Key Laboratory of Subsurface Hydrology and Ecological Effects in Arid Region, Ministry of Education, Chang’an University, Xi’an 710054, China
2
School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Chang’an University, Xi’an 710054, China
3
Liaoning Zhongwang Group Co., Ltd., Liaoyang 111003, China
4
School of Geography and Tourism, Shaanxi Normal University, Xi’an 710054, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15(1), 101; https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ijerph15010101
Submission received: 3 November 2017 / Revised: 4 January 2018 / Accepted: 6 January 2018 / Published: 9 January 2018

Abstract

:
The adsorption behavior and mechanism for the uptake of fluoride ions by untreated and desugared reed residues (roots, stems and leaves) were studied through adsorption experiments, elemental analysis, infrared spectroscopy and surface area analysis. The results showed that the adsorption capacity of untreated and desugared reeds followed the order: desugared roots 2136 mg/kg > desugared leaves 1825 mg/kg > desugared stems 1551 mg/kg > untreated roots 191 mg/kg > untreated stems 175 mg/kg > untreated leaves 150 mg/kg, so adsorption capacity of desugared reeds was larger than that of the untreated reeds. The adsorption kinetic of fluoride ions followed a pseudo-first-order model. A Langmuir model could be used to fit the isothermal adsorption process which was a spontaneous endothermic reaction involving mainly physical adsorption. The ΔG for the uptake of fluoride by the desugared reeds was more negative, so the degree of spontaneity was higher than for the use of the untreated reeds. After samples were desugared, the specific surface area and aromaticity of the reed increased, while the polarity and hydrophilicity decreased, which explained the adsorption amount of desugared reed was higher than that of the untreated. This study enriches techniques and methods of removing fluoride ions from water.

1. Introduction

Fluorine is a non-metallic chemical element, widely distributed in the environment in the atmosphere [1], minerals [2,3,4,5], underground [6,7], food [8,9,10] and groundwater [11]. Excessive fluoride concentrations in drinking water and food can lead to endemic fluorosis. In recent years, many measures and processes for the purification of high fluoride water have been evaluated. However the lack of an economic and practical high-fluoride water purification technology has created a technical and economic bottleneck in implementing a strategy safe water for supplying safe drinking water to remote and poor areas. This has restricted the development of the social economy in those areas. The treatment techniques of high fluoride water are mainly reverse osmosis, ion-exchange, chemical precipitation, membrane filtration and adsorption [12]. Biological adsorption methods are widely studied due to the high efficiency of removal fluoride and environmental friendliness [13]. Therefore, investigating the adsorption behavior and mechanism of fluoride ion is of great necessity.
Natural zeolites, the macromolecule chitosan, soil and other natural materials are cheap and easy to obtain, but their adsorption capacity towards fluoride ions is quite low. The adsorption of fluoride ions by natural material is usually limited to materials modified with metal compounds. After modification, the adsorption capacity can be improved, but the modification may cause secondary pollution problems. Sun et al. [14] reported modified zeolite could reduce the concentration of fluoride in wastewater from 10 mg/L to 1.0 mg/L. Hong et al. [15], and Liang et al. [16] reported that the adsorption capacity of chitosan modified by lanthanum was up to 3.67 mg/g, and the chitosan modified by misch metal (an alloy of rare-earth metals) has higher adsorption capacity than chitosan modified by lanthanum. Wang et al. [17] showed that modification of clay with PAC improved its adsorption performance by 62.61%, while also enhancing the adaptability of clay to pH.
Plant residues are inexpensive, renewable and natural absorbent materials widely available in the natural environment. Plants are readily accessible in a lot of polluted areas, such as mining sites and river edges. Therefore, the study of the adsorption of pollutants by plants has gradually become a focal point in sorption science. Nowadays, domestic and foreign research on the adsorption of ions by plants has made some progress. Ma et al. [18] reported fluoride ions were mainly transported to leaves, accounting for 90% of the fluoride content of whole tea plants, while the roots and stems did not accumulate many fluoride ions. He et al. [19] showed that the distribution of fluoride content in spinach was the same as in celery, and in the order old leaf > young leaf > root. Liao studied the tolerance and absorption mechanism of hyperaccumulators towards heavy metals. Wang et al. [20] studied the adsorption characteristics of reed on the heavy metals Pb2+ and Mn2+, which showed different plant organs have different adsorption capacities for different ions. Studies on the adsorption of pollutants by reeds were mostly concentrated on organic pollutants and heavy metals and little on inorganic ions.
Therefore, this study the uptake of fluoride ions by reed from the Weihe River was investigated in terms of its adsorption behavior and the mechanism, looking at different untreated and desugared reed tissues (roots, stems and leaves).

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Sample Collection and Pre-Treatment

One kind of reed material was obtained from the Chanba Ecological District (Xi’an, China, 34°25′14.45″ N, 109°1′1.46″ E). The untreated root (R-U), stem (S-U), and leaf (L-U) samples were washed with deionized water to remove surface impurities such as dust, dried in the shade, broken into pieces and passed through a 60-mesh sieve, then stored in different clean sealed dehumidification jars.
The desugarization process of the original samples was conducted by acidification with 6 mol/L HCl solution under reflux for 6 h below 100 °C [21], followed by extraction by vacuum filtration, and washing to neutrality with deionized water to obtain desugared root (R-D), stem (S-D), and leaf (L-D) samples (Figure 1), which finally were stored in the same way as the untreated samples above.
The initial fluoride ion solution was prepared by adding KF (Guaranteed Reagent, GR). An ion selective electrode method was used to determine the fluoride ion content.

2.2. Adsorption Experiment Methods

The initial concentration of fluoride ion for kinetic adsorption experiments was 2.4 mg/L at 298 K. In all experiments the same amount of plant samples was used. The concentration of fluoride ions remaining in the solution was determined at regular intervals, then adsorption curves were drawn and kinetic adsorption models were fitted. Isothermal adsorption experiments were conducted at 298 K with the concentration of fluoride ion solution was varied between 2.0 mg/L to 10.0 mg/L. The thermodynamics experiments were conducted at 298 K, 308 K and 318 K, pH = 7.0, the other steps followed isothermal adsorption experiments. Equations were fitted and calculated following methods described in the literature [22,23,24,25,26].

2.3. Analysis

Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra of the untreated and desugared reed residues were recorded in the 4000–400 cm−1 region for a KBr pellet by a FTIR spectra (model Tensor-27, Bruker, Karlsruhe, Germany) with a resolution of 4.0 cm−1. Elemental (C, H, O, N) analyses of the untreated and desugared reed residues were conducted using a Vario EL cube elemental analyzer (Elementar, Frankfurt, Germany). The H/C, (N + O)/C and O/C molar ratio of reed residues were calculated to evaluate their aromaticity, polarity and hydrophilicity, respectively. The surface area, pore area, pore volume and average pore size determinations were carried out by N2 adsorption isotherms using a Micrometrics ASAP 2020K surface area analyzer (Micromeritics Instrument Corp., Atlanta, GA, USA) [27].

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Characteristic of Adsorption Behavior

3.1.1. Characteristic of Kinetic Adsorption

The adsorption kinetic curves for the uptake of fluoride ions by reed residues are shown in Figure 2. All samples rapidly adsorbed the fluoride ions during the first 90 min of the experiment, and gradually reached saturation at about 120 min. This was due to the fact that the initial concentration of fluoride in the solution was higher and the adsorption was easier. With the passage of time, the adsorption sites of the adsorbent surface became occupied, so that the adsorption was blocked and the adsorption rate slowed down, gradually reaching equilibrium.
The fluoride absorption capacity of reed residues could be greatly improved by desugarization of the samples, which might be due to the fact this process increased the pore sizes and thus raised the surface area of the samples. In this study, the adsorption capacity of roots was highest, whether the samples were desugarized or not; the adsorption capacity of the untreated reed stems was higher than that of leaves, but the equilibrium adsorption capacity of the desugared reed leaves was higher than that of stems. The adsorption behavior of untreated and desugared reed towards fluoride ions was fitted according to the pseudo-first-order model and the pseudo-second-order model (Table 1).
Listed are the equilibrium adsorption amount of roots, stems and leaves of untreated and desugared reeds (Table 1). The adsorption amount increased significantly by 8~12 times after desugarization, which showed that desugarization could promote the adsorption of fluoride ions by reed residues. Untreated samples were in good agreement with the pseudo-first-order model, but desugared samples were in good agreement with the pseudo-second-order model because correlation coefficient R2 of pseudo-second-order model was higher than that of pseudo-first-order model [28].

3.1.2. Characteristic of Isothermal Adsorption

The data for the uptake of fluoride ions adsorbed by roots, stems and leaves of reed before and after desugarization were fitted according to Langmuir and Freundlich model, respectively. The fitted curves are shown in Figure 3, and the fitted parameters are shown in Table 2.
In isothermal adsorption process the adsorption capacity of fluoride ion before and after desugarization had significant differences (Figure 3), and the equilibrium adsorption capacity increased with rising equilibrium concentrations. The coefficient R2 of fitted Langmuir model of the fluoride ions adsorption by the untreated reed was 0.9401, 0.8418 and 0.8116, and the fitted Freundlich model R2 was 0.9351, 0.8181 and 0.7867. After desugarization, according to Langmuir model fitting, R2 was 0.9882, 0.9880 and 0.9917, and R2 of Freundlich model fitting was 0.9749, 0.9695 and 0.9737, respectively. Qm and KL of fitted Langmuir model increased significantly and KF of Freundlich model fitting increased after desugarization. It can be seen that both the Langmuir model and the Freundlich model could describe the isothermal adsorption process of reed roots, desugared stems and leaves, but the Langmuir model provided a slightly better fit to the data. Comparative investigation of fluoride adsorption using different adsorbents is summarized in Table 3. Fluoride adsorption capacity of untreated roots in this study was similar to the natural materials in other literature while adsorption capacity of untreated stems and leaves was lower. After desugarization, the fluoride adsorption capacity of roots, stems and leaves increased significantly and reached levels comparable to modified and synthetic materials.

3.1.3. Characteristic of Thermodynamic Adsorption

Isothermal adsorption experiments were carried out at 298 K, 308 K and 318 K. The data was fitted to the Langmuir model. The fitted curves are shown in Figure 4 and the fitted parameters are listed in Table 4.
It can be seen from Figure 4 that with increasing temperature, the equilibrium adsorption capacity increased significantly. This suggested that the adsorption process was endothermic.
The thermodynamic parameters are shown in Table 5. K0 is an adsorption constant that is calculated by the intercept of graph of ln (Qe/Ce) versus Ce.
It can be seen from Table 5 that ΔG is less than 0 and greater than −20, indicating that the adsorption process was mainly a physical adsorption and spontaneous reaction. ΔG gradually decreased with increasing temperature, indicating that the increase of temperature was conducive to the spontaneous adsorption; ΔH > 0 indicated that the process of adsorption of fluoride ions was endothermic; ΔS > 0 indicated that in the adsorption process, the structure of reed surface was changed, so that the solid-liquid interface increased the degree of disorder.

3.2. Analysis of Adsorption Mechanism

3.2.1. Analysis of the Elemental Composition

The elemental composition and molar ratio of the reed samples are given in Table 6.
It can be seen from Table 5 that the reed residues contained large amounts of the elements C, H, and O. In desugared samples, carbon content was increased, while hydrogen and oxygen contents were decreased compared to the untreated reed residues. The aromatic, polar and hydrophilic index of roots decreased by 0.44, 0.24 and 0.23 units, respectively, after desugarization, and the aromatic index of the desugared reed stems and leaves all decreased by 0.24 units, polar index decreased by 0.12, 0.16 units, hydrophilic index decreased by 0.11, 0.13 units. This may be due to the removal of the sugar from the sample surface after desugarization and thus to removal of polar tissue. The most significant changes occurred in reed roots.
The adsorption coefficient Kd and the partition coefficient KOC [41] of the organic carbon changed significantly during desugarization, and increasing compared with the untreated samples. The increase for the roots was the largest. The increases of the reed stems and leaves was similar. The increase of Kd and KOC values corresponded to the increase in fluoride adsorption capacity of reed residues before and after desugarization.

3.2.3. Analysis of FTIR

FTIR spectra of the samples in the range of 4000–400 cm−1 before and after desugarization are presented in Figure 5.
The C-O-C band at 1300–1000 cm−1 indicates one of the main functional groups associated with sugars and carbohydrates as found in the untreated samples. Desugarization led to a significant drop in the band intensity in the 1300–1000 cm−1 wavenumber range of. Stretching vibrations of C=C, C=O and –COOH between 1750–1640 cm−1 were also affected, while the C-H stretching vibration (3000–2850 cm−1) and C-H bending vibration (1465–1340 cm−1) increased in intensity. This indicated that fat and aromatic groups were exposed during desugarization. Polysaccharide material in the plant could hinder the adsorption ability of aromatic groups, therefore, it could concluded that removal of carbohydrates led to easier access to aromatic groups, which improved the adsorption capacity.

3.2.4. Analysis of Surface Area

Based on the experimental results, the adsorption capacity of roots was the largest reported above. Therefore, the surface area and pore analysis of the untreated and desugared samples of reed roots were studied. Adsorption-desorption N2 isotherms are shown in Figure 6, and the surface area and pore size data are listed in Table 7.
As shown in Figure 6, N2 adsorption desorption loops were not closed, because the experiments were below 0.3 Pa pressure, so irreversible adsorption occurred, and the adsorbed N2 could not be desorbed. This indicated that there was a strong adsorption potential in the micropores of the materials. The adsorption amount hardly increased with rising pressure, which indicated untreated roots could not absorb N2. While after desugarization, the adsorption amount increased which showed N2 was absorbed.
As can be seen from Table 7, the surface area, pore area and micropore volume of desugared reed roots improved 14.27, 1.35 and 1.44 times respectively. This means that the adsorption capacity of desugared reed roots was significantly larger than that of untreated reed roots.
According to the analysis of the elemental composition, FTIR and surface area, the adsorption mechanism schematic is illustrated in Figure 7. The surface of untreated reeds was relatively smooth, while desugared reeds had rough surfaces with deep holes, and the polarity and hydrophilicity of untreated reeds were larger than that of desugared reeds. Thus the adsorption performance was stronger after desugarization.

4. Conclusions

The adsorption behavior and mechanism of fluoride ions by untreated and desugared reeds were studied. The following conclusions were drawn:
(1)
Fluoride ions could be adsorbed by untreated reed residues, and the adsorption capacities were 191 mg/kg for roots, 175 mg/kg for stems and 150 mg/kg for leaves;
(2)
Adsorption capacities after desugarization increased significantly by 8~12 times (roots 2136 mg/kg, stems 1551 mg/kg and leaves 1825 mg/kg);
(3)
Desugared reed roots had high adsorption capacity for N2 compared with untreated roots that didn’t adsorb N2, and its surface area increased by 14.27 times. After desugarization, the surface area and aromaticity of reed residues increased, while the polarity and hydrophilicity decreased. This was the reason for the increase in the adsorption capacities.
The fluoride adsorption capacities of reed residues could be increased significantly after desugarization to levels competing with synthetic and metal-modified materials. In order to use this plant material in practical engineering, we will further explore the adsorption properties of fluoride ion in the presence of other anions such as sulphate, chloride, carbonate and bicarbonates that are commonly found.

Acknowledgments

We are highly grateful to the anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments. This project was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 41372259 and No. 41672224) and the National Key Research and Development Program of China (No. 2016YFC0400701).

Author Contributions

This paper represents a result of collaborative teamwork. Shengke Yang conceived and designed the experiments; Rong Song wrote the manuscript; Haiyang Xu and Yangyang Chen analyzed the data; Zongzhou Wang drew figures; Yanhua Wang provided constructive suggestions for the manuscript. The six authors contributed equally to this work.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Untreated and desugared samples.
Figure 1. Untreated and desugared samples.
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Figure 2. Adsorption kinetic curves for the uptake of fluoride by reed residues. R-U, S-U, L-U refer to the roots, stems, leaves of the untreated samples, and R-D, S-D, L-D refer to the roots, stems, leaves with desugarization.
Figure 2. Adsorption kinetic curves for the uptake of fluoride by reed residues. R-U, S-U, L-U refer to the roots, stems, leaves of the untreated samples, and R-D, S-D, L-D refer to the roots, stems, leaves with desugarization.
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Figure 3. The fitted isothermal adsorption model for the uptake of fluoride ions by reed residues. (a) Langmuir Model; (b) Freundlich Model.
Figure 3. The fitted isothermal adsorption model for the uptake of fluoride ions by reed residues. (a) Langmuir Model; (b) Freundlich Model.
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Figure 4. The fitted Langmuir model of the untreated and desugared (a) roots; (b) stems; (c) leaves at different temperatures.
Figure 4. The fitted Langmuir model of the untreated and desugared (a) roots; (b) stems; (c) leaves at different temperatures.
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Figure 5. FTIR spectra of the reed (a) roots and (b) leaves.
Figure 5. FTIR spectra of the reed (a) roots and (b) leaves.
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Figure 6. Adsorption-desorption isotherm.
Figure 6. Adsorption-desorption isotherm.
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Figure 7. The adsorption mechanism schematic.
Figure 7. The adsorption mechanism schematic.
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Table 1. Kinetic parameters.
Table 1. Kinetic parameters.
SamplesQe, Exp. (mg/kg)Pseudo-First-Order ModelPseudo-Second-Order Model
R2K1 (1/min)Qe, cal (mg/kg)R2K2 (kg/mg·min)Qe, cal (mg/kg)
R-U191.280.97640.0254196.020.92631.38 × 10−4226.52
S-U175.290.94010.0170183.880.89837.54 × 10−5227.51
L-U149.520.92080.0242149.810.93481.90 × 10−4170.91
R-D2135.660.89320.04912108.140.95373.33 × 10−52291.83
S-D1551.420.86680.05781530.640.93105.67 × 10−51646.98
L-D1824.570.83180.02581840.130.83771.75 × 10−52074.31
Table 2. The fitted Parameters of Langmuir model and Freundlich model.
Table 2. The fitted Parameters of Langmuir model and Freundlich model.
SamplesLangmuir ModelFreundlich Model
Qm (mg/kg)KL (L/mg)R2RLKF (mg/kg) (L/mg) 1/nnR2
R-U3547.040.02080.94010.437572.371.070.9351
S-U655.370.07780.84180.419053.101.340.8181
L-U668.870.06910.81160.421547.501.270.7867
R-D10,859.820.10180.98820.41231210.721.500.9749
S-D6404.780.08860.98010.4159622.291.440.9695
L-D5497.050.14600.99170.4016869.471.710.9737
Table 3. Comparative investigation of fluoride adsorption using different absorbents.
Table 3. Comparative investigation of fluoride adsorption using different absorbents.
AdsorbentIsotherm ModelpHCapacity (mg/g)Reference
Natural materialsNatural pumiceF6.04.50[29]
Natural pumiceF3.01.170[30]
Natural geomaterial limonite (Iron Ore)L7.00.269[31]
Kaolinite clayL 1.450[32]
MontmorillonitesF6.03.365[33]
Untreated reed rootL7.03.547This study
Untreated reed stemL7.00.655This study
Untreated reed leafL7.00.669This study
Modified materialsModified pumice with FeCl3F3.021.740[32]
Modified pumice with HDTMAF3.025.000[32]
Modified magnetite ore with aluminum and lanthanum ionsL7.8M-Al 1.51
M-Na 1.42
[34]
Modified montmorillonite with Fe(III)L4.59.696[35]
Modified chitosan with neodymiumL7.022.380[36]
Modified zeolite with calcium chlorideF/L 1.766[37]
Desugared reed rootL7.010.860This study
Desugared reed stemL7.06.405This study
Desugared reed leafL7.05.497This study
Synthetic materialsMnCO3 nanowiresL7.011.580[38]
Graphene oxide (GO)-incorporated iron-aluminium mixed oxideL7.022.900[39]
Ce-Ti oxides nanoparticlesL7.044.370[40]
Ce-Ti@Fe3O4 nanoparticlesL7.091.070[40]
Table 4. The fitted parameters of the Langmuir model at different temperatures.
Table 4. The fitted parameters of the Langmuir model at different temperatures.
SamplesParametersT (K)
298308318
R-UQm (mg/kg)3547.045313.885076.931
KL (L/mg)0.02080.01690.0019
R20.94010.90820.9879
S-UQm (mg/kg)655.37648.051089.40
KL (L/mg)0.07780.12710.0896
R20.84180.76870.9161
L-UQm (mg/kg)668.87604.28947.65
KL (L/mg)0.06910.12450.0933
R20.81160.74650.8317
R-DQm (mg/kg)10,859.829573.7111,775.19
KL (L/mg)0.10180.19760.1835
R20.98820.97960.9899
S-DQm (mg/kg)6404.7810,470.9910,280.32
KL (L/mg)0.08860.07020.0957
R20.98010.98320.9921
L-DQm (mg/kg)5497.056373.208185.86
KL (L/mg)0.14600.18790.1771
R20.99170.84360.9506
Table 5. The thermodynamic parameters.
Table 5. The thermodynamic parameters.
SamplesT (K)K0ΔG (K·mol1)ΔH (KJ·mol−1)ΔS (KJ·mol−1·K−1)
R-U2983.9785−3.42134.60100.0270
3084.3751−3.7794
3184.4680−3.9577
S-U2983.4964−3.10138.70970.0397
3083.9921−3.5450
3184.3598−3.8929
L-U2983.2021−2.88348.34060.0378
3083.7504−3.3849
3183.9530−3.6339
R-D2986.9271−4.79523.47460.0278
3087.4067−5.1275
3187.5623−5.3490
S-D2986.2228−4.52953.60130.0273
3086.4882−4.7885
3186.8193−5.0756
L-D2986.5464−4.65513.53350.0275
3086.9914−4.9798
3187.1577−5.2036
Table 6. Element composition and atomic ratio.
Table 6. Element composition and atomic ratio.
SamplesQe, Exp. (mg/kg)C (%)H (%)O (%)H/C(N + O)/CO/CKd (L/kg)Koc
R-U191.2442.466.0644.591.710.810.7963.67149.95
R-D2135.6651.495.4638.281.270.570.56472.43917.52
S-U175.2944.936.1244.881.630.760.7527.1560.43
S-D1551.4250.965.9143.431.390.640.64262.42514.95
L-U149.5242.136.1040.431.740.760.7226.5262.95
L-D1824.5750.156.2639.181.500.600.59258.84516.13
Table 7. The surface area, pore area, micropore volume and pore size of the untreated and desugared roots.
Table 7. The surface area, pore area, micropore volume and pore size of the untreated and desugared roots.
Sample TypesSurface Area (m2/g)Pore Area (m2/g)Micropore Volume (cm3/g)Average Pore Size (nm)
R-U0.18442.22740.0009-
R-D2.63213.00500.00138.8610

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Song, R.; Yang, S.; Xu, H.; Wang, Z.; Chen, Y.; Wang, Y. Adsorption Behavior and Mechanism for the Uptake of Fluoride Ions by Reed Residues. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 101. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ijerph15010101

AMA Style

Song R, Yang S, Xu H, Wang Z, Chen Y, Wang Y. Adsorption Behavior and Mechanism for the Uptake of Fluoride Ions by Reed Residues. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018; 15(1):101. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ijerph15010101

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Song, Rong, Shengke Yang, Haiyang Xu, Zongzhou Wang, Yangyang Chen, and Yanhua Wang. 2018. "Adsorption Behavior and Mechanism for the Uptake of Fluoride Ions by Reed Residues" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 1: 101. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ijerph15010101

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