Activation of Waste Materials with Carbon(IV) Oxide as an Effective Method of Obtaining Biochars of Attractive Sorption Properties towards Liquid and Gas Pollutants.
Aleksandra Bazan-WoźniakJudyta Cielecka-PiontekAgnieszka Nosal-WiercińskaRobert PietrzakPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Biochars that are the subjects of this report have been obtained from the residue of supercritical extraction of common nettle seeds with CO 2 . The residue was subjected to direct activation with carbon(IV) oxide as an activator. The obtained biochars were found to have a specific surface area inthe range of 888-1024 m 2 /g and a basic surface. They were used for the adsorption of a liquid organic pollutant (methylene blue) and a gas inorganic pollutant (NO 2 ). As follows from the test results, the biochars were able to adsorb 150-239 mg of the dye. The Langmuir model was found to better describe the adsorption experimental data, while the kinetics of the process was better described by the pseudo-second-order model. From the thermodynamic analysis, it was inferred that the adsorption of methylene blue from a water solution was an endothermic and spontaneous reaction. It was established that elevated temperature of activation and the presence of air stream during adsorption had a positive impact on the adsorption of NO 2 by the biochars studied. The greatest sorption capacity of the biochars towards NO 2 was 59.1 mg/g.