From Olive Mill Solid Waste to Engineered Biochar: An Effective Processing Approach to Trihalomethane Removal from Water
Sara P. Azerrad, Shilat Parsha, Hassan Azaizeh, Nariman Mattar-Dabit, Manal Haj Zaroubi, Eyal KurzbaumTrihalomethanes (THMs) are priority disinfection by-products in drinking water, and their effective removal remains a persistent challenge for sustainable treatment. Here, olive mill solid waste (OMSW) was valorized into biochar (BC) and evaluated as a low-cost adsorbent for chloroform, bromodichloromethane (BDCM), chlorodibromomethane (CDBM), and bromoform under environmentally relevant conditions. Among the prepared materials, thermally activated BC (BC-T) performed best, achieving equilibrium removals of 74.7 ± 6.6% for chloroform, 91.1 ± 0.8% for BDCM, 87.2 ± 1.9% for CDBM, and 93.8 ± 0.3% for bromoform at 3000 mg/L. Adsorption increased with bromine substitution, following the order of bromoform > CDBM ≈ BDCM > chloroform, consistent with rising hydrophobicity. In contrast, KOH and Zn/Fe activation increased the BET surface area but did not improve THM removal, suggesting that adsorption was controlled by surface chemistry and site accessibility rather than surface area alone. Persulfate (PSF) addition reduced THM removal, indicating that oxidant activation did not compensate for the loss of adsorption capacity. Adsorption data were well described by the Freundlich isotherm and pseudo-second-order kinetics. BC-T also maintained high removal efficiency in drinking water, demonstrating its promise as a practical polishing adsorbent for THM control and as a route for high-value valorization of an abundant agricultural residue.