The production of activated carbon from Acacia erioloba seedpods via phosphoric acid activation method for the removal of methylene blue from water.
Loading...
Date
2023
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Wastewater treatment requires a lot of granular activated carbon to absorb the dissolved organic components. This article describes a low-cost process for making highly active adsorption activated carbons from biomass, which could be used for wastewater treatment. A one-step carbonization and chemical activation with phosphoric acid at 500 ◦C produced low-cost acacia-derived porous activated carbons. The activated carbons’ moisture, ash, volatile matter, and fixed carbon content were determined using proximate analysis. The activated carbon’s adsorption qualities were also determined by studying its bulk density, surface morphology, power of hydrogen, iodine number, and methylene blue number index. To test the produced activated carbons for water treatment, batch adsorption dynamics were performed at room temperature for the removal of methylene blue
from aqueous solution. Compared to activation using H2SO4, H3PO4 proves superior in generating welldeveloped pores, leading to a mesoporosity and microporosity structure with a larger surface area and high adsorption capacity. Brunauer–Emmett–Teller determined the sample’s specific surface area, which was found to be 387 m2 /g. The iodine number for 50, 100, and 200 μm activated carbon particles size was 620, 592, and 632 mg/g, respectively. The adsorption of MB on AC material better fits with Langmuir’s adsorption isotherm; hence, particles are adsorbed on well-pronounced heterogeneous surfaces. The sips model is found to best represent the equilibrium data with R2 values of 0.994, suggesting the heterogeneous surface adsorption of MB on AC. Therefore, the adsorption of AC by MB involves physical and chemical processes. The produced AC hence appears to remove dissolved organic contaminants from raw water.
Description
This article describes a practical, low-cost procedure for preparing activated carbon from locally available biomass, with the aim to increase the adsorption capacity, specific surface area (SBET), pore volume, and pore dimension of the AC derived from erioloba seedpods, now using H3PO4 instead of H2SO4.
Keywords
Activated carbon, Proximate analysis, Acacia seed pods, Brunauer–Emmett–Teller, Langmuir model Freundlich model, Phosphoric acid