Azadirachta indica leaf powder as an effective biosorbent for dyes: a case study with aqueous Congo Red solutions [An article from: Journal of Environmental Management]
Book Details
Author(s)K.G. Bhattacharyya, A. Sharma
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR0OG6
ISBN-13978B000RR0OG2
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Journal of Environmental Management, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
In the present work, the leaves of Azadirachta indica (locally known as the Neem tree) in the form of a powder were investigated as a biosorbent of dyes taking aqueous Congo Red solution as a model system. The sorbent was made from mature Neem leaves and was investigated in a batch reactor under variable system parameters such as concentration of the aqueous dye solution, agitation time, adsorbent amount, pH, and temperature. An amount of 0.6 g of the Neem leaf powder (NLP) per litre could remove 52.0-99.0% of the dye from an aqueous solution of concentration 2.87x10^-^2mmoll^-^1 with the agitation time increasing from 60 to 300 min. The interactions were tested with respect to both pseudo first-order and second-order reaction kinetics; the latter was found to be more suitable. Considerable intra-particle diffusion was found to occur simultaneously. The sorption process was in conformity with Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms yielding values of the adsorption coefficients in the following ranges: Freundlich n: 0.12-0.19, K"f: 0.1039-0.2648Lg^-^1; Langmuir q"m: 41.24-128.26 g kg^-^1, b: 443.3-1898.0 l mmol^-^1, which supported favourable adsorption. The Langmuir monolayer capacity (q"m) was high and the values of the coefficient b indicated the equilibrium, dye+NLP=dye...NLP being shifted overwhelmingly towards adsorption. Thermodynamically, the sorption process was exothermic with an average heat of adsorption of -12.75 kJ mol^-^1. The spontaneity of the sorption process was also confirmed by the favourable values of Gibbs energy (mean values: -1.09 to -1.81 kJ mol^-^1) and entropy of adsorption (range: -18.97 to -56.32 J mol^-^1K^-^1). The results point to the effectiveness of the Neem leaf powder as a biosorbent for removing dyes like Congo Red from water.
Description:
In the present work, the leaves of Azadirachta indica (locally known as the Neem tree) in the form of a powder were investigated as a biosorbent of dyes taking aqueous Congo Red solution as a model system. The sorbent was made from mature Neem leaves and was investigated in a batch reactor under variable system parameters such as concentration of the aqueous dye solution, agitation time, adsorbent amount, pH, and temperature. An amount of 0.6 g of the Neem leaf powder (NLP) per litre could remove 52.0-99.0% of the dye from an aqueous solution of concentration 2.87x10^-^2mmoll^-^1 with the agitation time increasing from 60 to 300 min. The interactions were tested with respect to both pseudo first-order and second-order reaction kinetics; the latter was found to be more suitable. Considerable intra-particle diffusion was found to occur simultaneously. The sorption process was in conformity with Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms yielding values of the adsorption coefficients in the following ranges: Freundlich n: 0.12-0.19, K"f: 0.1039-0.2648Lg^-^1; Langmuir q"m: 41.24-128.26 g kg^-^1, b: 443.3-1898.0 l mmol^-^1, which supported favourable adsorption. The Langmuir monolayer capacity (q"m) was high and the values of the coefficient b indicated the equilibrium, dye+NLP=dye...NLP being shifted overwhelmingly towards adsorption. Thermodynamically, the sorption process was exothermic with an average heat of adsorption of -12.75 kJ mol^-^1. The spontaneity of the sorption process was also confirmed by the favourable values of Gibbs energy (mean values: -1.09 to -1.81 kJ mol^-^1) and entropy of adsorption (range: -18.97 to -56.32 J mol^-^1K^-^1). The results point to the effectiveness of the Neem leaf powder as a biosorbent for removing dyes like Congo Red from water.
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