Water pollution, caused by selenium contamination, is a significant global issue due to its toxic effects on humans and animals. Selenium occurs in several oxidation states, among which selenite and selenate are the most mobile and bioavailable forms. Traditional water treatment methods are often limited in efficiency, whereas adsorption offers a simple, cost-effective, and efficient solution. Various adsorbents, including metal and mineral oxides, carbon-based materials (activated carbon, graphene oxide), biosorbents, and nanocomposites, have shown high potential for Se removal. Adsorbent modifications—physical, chemical, or composite—significantly enhance adsorption capacity, selectivity, and material stability. Studies have demonstrated that nanomaterials and nanocomposites, such as MnFe2O4, PAA-MGO, magnetic MOFs, and magnetite-based biochars, enable rapid removal of Se(IV) and Se(VI) with high adsorption capacities. Se(IV) is primarily adsorbed through innersphere complexation, while Se(VI) forms weaker outer-sphere interactions, explaining differences in removal efficiency. Factors such as pH, the presence of surface hydroxyl and amino groups, surface charge, and competing ions strongly influence the adsorption process. Multivalent ions reduce Se adsorption efficiency, whereas monovalent ions (NO3− and Cl−) have minimal impact. Modified adsorbents, nanomaterials, and nanocomposites provide sustainable and practical solutions for selenium removal from water, combining high efficiency, selectivity, and reusability, making them suitable for real-world water treatment applications.
Marjanović et al. (Thu,) studied this question.