Sorptive removal of salicylic acid and ibuprofen from aqueous solutions using pine wood fast pyrolysis biochar
Autor: | Matthew Essandoh, Dinesh Mohan, Todd E. Mlsna, Bidhya Kunwar, Charles U. Pittman |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
chemistry.chemical_classification
Langmuir General Chemical Engineering Carboxylic acid Inorganic chemistry Sorption General Chemistry Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering chemistry.chemical_compound Adsorption chemistry Desorption Biochar Environmental Chemistry Freundlich equation Salicylic acid |
Zdroj: | Chemical Engineering Journal. 265:219-227 |
ISSN: | 1385-8947 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cej.2014.12.006 |
Popis: | Pine wood biochar, prepared at 698 K with a residence time of 20–30 s in an auger-fed reactor, was used as a 3-dimensional adsorbent to remove salicylic acid and ibuprofen from aqueous solutions. This biochar was characterized by FT-IR spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, surface area determination, and zero point charge measurements. Batch sorption studies were carried out at pH values from 2 to 10, adsorbate concentrations from 25 to 100 mg/L and temperatures from 298 to 318 K. The adsorption of both adsorbates was highest at low pH values, dropped as pH increased and then exhibited a second increase related to the p K a of these carboxylic acid adsorbates. This was followed by a further drop at high pH. Conjugate acid/base equilibria of the adsorbates and the phenolic hydroxyl and carboxylic acid biochar sites versus pH dominated the mechanism. Sorption followed pseudo-second order kinetics. Sorption was evaluated from 298 to 318 K using the Freundlich, Langmuir, Redlich–Peterson, Toth, Sips, and Radke–Prausnitz adsorption isotherm models. Langmuir adsorption capacities for both salicylic acid and ibuprofen were 22.70 and 10.74 mg/g, respectively. This low surface area pinewood biochar (1.35 m 2 /g) can adsorb far more adsorbate compared to commercial activated carbons per unit of measured surface area. Methanol stripping achieved 93% and 88% desorption of salicylic acid and ibuprofen, respectively, from the spent biochar, and 76% and 72% of the initial salicylic acid and ibuprofen adsorption capacity, respectively, remained after four full capacity equilibrium recycles. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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