Removal of azo dye from aqueous solution by a low-cost activated carbon prepared from coal: adsorption kinetics, isotherms study, and DFT simulation.
Saeed Ullah JanAziz AhmadAdnan Ali KhanSaad MelhiIftikhar AhmadGuohua SunCheng-Meng ChenRashid AhmadPublished in: Environmental science and pollution research international (2020)
The high-risk organic pollutants produced by industries are of growing concern. The highly porous coal-based activated carbon (AC) having a specific surface area of 3452.8 m2/g is used for the adsorption of azo dye from synthetic solution. The sorbent is characterized through BET, SEM, TEM, XRD, FT-IR, TGA, and zeta potential. The sorbent exhibits - 18.7 mV surface charge, which is high enough for making suspension. The maximum dye uptake of 333 mg/g is observed in sorbent under acidic medium. The thermodynamics parameters like ∆G, ∆H, and ΔS were found to be - 12.40 kJ mol-1, 39.66 kJ mol-1, and 174.55 J mol-1 K-1 at 293 K, respectively, revealing that the adsorption mechanism is spontaneous, endothermic, and feasible. The experimental data follows the Langmuir and D-R models. The adsorption follows pseudo 2nd-order kinetics. DFT investigation shows that the dye sorption onto AC in configuration No. 4 (CFG-4) is more effective, as this configuration has high ∆H (enthalpy change) and adsorption energy (Eads). This is confirmed by Mullikan atomic charge transfer phenomenon.
Keyphrases
- aqueous solution
- low cost
- metal organic framework
- solid phase extraction
- highly efficient
- molecularly imprinted
- particulate matter
- heavy metals
- molecular docking
- gas chromatography
- density functional theory
- deep learning
- risk assessment
- high resolution
- artificial intelligence
- molecular dynamics
- sewage sludge
- tandem mass spectrometry
- solar cells
- simultaneous determination