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1.
Environ Technol ; 42(12): 1810-1825, 2021 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31622180

RESUMO

Arsenic present in water bodies causes devastating effects on aquatic organisms and indirectly poses a hazardous threat to human existence. There is an urgent need to develop potential and convincing technologies to troubleshoot this problem. In the present study, an adsorbent has been prepared using the waste red mud from hazardous aluminium industry and doping it with calcium-alginate beads (ARMCB) for the effective removal of As(III) from wastewater. The concentration of As(III) was reduced from 0.101 mg/L to 0.008 mg/L after adsorption which effectively met the economic and environmental conditions imposed by WHO (>0.01 mg/L). Further, the statistical Response Surface Methodology (RSM) is adopted to analyze the combined effects of four operational parameters namely: pH, sorbent dosage, contact time and initial concentration on the adsorption of As(III) from the synthetic contaminated water samples. A high correlation coefficient (R2) value of 0.9672 projected by ANOVA confirmed the satisfactory regression of the developed model. The maximum adsorption capacity is found to be 1.807 mg/g at optimum operating conditions. The surface characterization of the adsorbent before and after adsorption by SEM, EDX, XRD, and FTIR confirms the potentiality of the adsorbent towards As(III) ions. Thermodynamic, adsorption isotherms and kinetic analysis respectively projected the endothermic Langmuir model adsorption of As(III) and the pseudo-second-order rate kinetics of the sorption mechanism. The current study aids the implementation of the developed robust technique for the successful removal of As(III) from industrial and domestic polluted water samples.


Assuntos
Poluentes Químicos da Água , Purificação da Água , Adsorção , Alginatos , Cálcio , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Cinética , Água
2.
J Environ Manage ; 218: 602-612, 2018 Jul 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29715669

RESUMO

Water pollution by industrial and anthropogenic actives has become a serious threat to the environment. World Health Organization (WHO) has identified that lead and fluoride amid the environmental pollutants are most poisonous water contaminants with devastating impact on the human race. The present work proposes a study on economical bio-adsorbent based technique using exhausted coffee grounds in the removal of lead and fluoride contaminants from water. The exhausted coffee grounds gathered from industrial wastes have been acid-activated and examined for their adsorption capacity. The surface morphology and elemental characterization of pre-and-post adsorption operations by FESEM, EDX and FTIR spectral analysis confirmed the potential of the exhausted coffee ground as successful bio-sorbent. However, thermodynamic analysis confirmed the adsorption to be spontaneous physisorption with Langmuir mode of homogenous monolayer deposition. The kinetics of adsorption is well defined by pseudo second order model for both lead and fluoride. A significant quantity of lead and fluoride is removed from the synthetic contaminated water by the proposed bio-sorbent with the respective sorption capabilities of 61.6 mg/g and 9.05 mg/g. However, the developed bio-sorbent is also recyclable and is capable of removing the lead and fluoride from the domestic and industrial waste-water sources with an overall removal efficiency of about 90%.


Assuntos
Café , Fluoretos , Chumbo , Purificação da Água , Adsorção , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Cinética , Termodinâmica , Poluentes Químicos da Água
3.
J Anal Methods Chem ; 2017: 4650594, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29527385

RESUMO

Calcium alginate beads doped with hydrazine sulphate-treated red mud are investigated as adsorbent for extracting lead ions from water using batch methods of extraction. Different extraction conditions are optimised for maximum lead extraction. Substantial amount of lead is removed, and the adsorption ability is found to be 138.6 mg/g. Surface characterization using FTIR, EDX, and FESEM confirms that lead is "onto" the surface of the adsorbent. Thermodynamic parameters, adsorption isotherms, and kinetics of adsorption are analysed. Adsorption is "physisorption" in nature and spontaneous. The adsorbent developed can be regenerated using 0.1 M HCl. Thus regenerated adsorbent can be used as the adsorbent for further removal of lead at least 10 times, and this enables the complete removal of lead from water by repetitive use of the regenerated adsorbent. The beads facilitate the easy filtration. The methodology developed is successfully applied for removing lead from industrial waste waters.

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