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Use of agricultural waste sugar beet pulp for the removal of Gemazol turquoise blue-G reactive dye from aqueous solution.
J Hazard Mater. 2006 Sep 01; 137(1):418-30.JH

Abstract

The potential use of dried sugar beet pulp, an agricultural solid waste by-product, as an biosorbent for Gemazol turquoise blue-G, a copper-pthalocyanine reactive dye commonly used in dyeing of cotton, was investigated in the present study. Batch adsorption studies were carried out to examine the influence of various parameters such as initial pH, temperature and initial dye concentration. The results indicated that adsorption was strongly pH-dependent and slightly temperature-dependent. At 800 mg l(-1) initial Gemazol turquoise blue-G concentration, dried sugar beet pulp exhibited the highest Gemazol turquoise blue-G uptake capacity of 234.8 mg g(-1) at 25 degrees C and at an initial pH value of 2.0. The Freundlich, Langmuir, Redlich-Peterson and Langmuir-Freundlich, the two and three parameters adsorption models were used for the mathematical description of the biosorption equilibrium and isotherm constants were evaluated depending on temperature. Both the Langmuir and Redlich-Peterson models were applicable for describing the dye biosorption by dried sugar beet pulp in the concentration (100-800 mg l(-1)) and temperature (25-45 degrees C) ranges studied. Simple mass transfer and kinetic models were applied to the experimental data to examine the mechanisms of biosorption and potential rate controlling steps such as external mass transfer, intraparticle diffusion and biosorption process. The sorption process was found to be controlled by both surface and pore diffusion with surface diffusion at the earlier stages followed by pore diffusion at the later stages. Pseudo first-order, pseudo second-order and saturation type kinetic models described the biosorption kinetics accurately at all concentrations and temperatures studied. The thermodynamic analysis indicated that the sorption process was exothermic and the biosorption of dye on dried sugar beet pulp might be physical in nature.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Hacettepe University, Department of Chemical Engineering, 06532 Beytepe, Ankara, Turkey. zaksu@hacettepe.edu.trNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16603311

Citation

Aksu, Zümriye, and I Alper Isoglu. "Use of Agricultural Waste Sugar Beet Pulp for the Removal of Gemazol Turquoise blue-G Reactive Dye From Aqueous Solution." Journal of Hazardous Materials, vol. 137, no. 1, 2006, pp. 418-30.
Aksu Z, Isoglu IA. Use of agricultural waste sugar beet pulp for the removal of Gemazol turquoise blue-G reactive dye from aqueous solution. J Hazard Mater. 2006;137(1):418-30.
Aksu, Z., & Isoglu, I. A. (2006). Use of agricultural waste sugar beet pulp for the removal of Gemazol turquoise blue-G reactive dye from aqueous solution. Journal of Hazardous Materials, 137(1), 418-30.
Aksu Z, Isoglu IA. Use of Agricultural Waste Sugar Beet Pulp for the Removal of Gemazol Turquoise blue-G Reactive Dye From Aqueous Solution. J Hazard Mater. 2006 Sep 1;137(1):418-30. PubMed PMID: 16603311.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Use of agricultural waste sugar beet pulp for the removal of Gemazol turquoise blue-G reactive dye from aqueous solution. AU - Aksu,Zümriye, AU - Isoglu,I Alper, Y1 - 2006/03/06/ PY - 2005/11/30/received PY - 2006/02/16/revised PY - 2006/02/16/accepted PY - 2006/4/11/pubmed PY - 2007/1/11/medline PY - 2006/4/11/entrez SP - 418 EP - 30 JF - Journal of hazardous materials JO - J Hazard Mater VL - 137 IS - 1 N2 - The potential use of dried sugar beet pulp, an agricultural solid waste by-product, as an biosorbent for Gemazol turquoise blue-G, a copper-pthalocyanine reactive dye commonly used in dyeing of cotton, was investigated in the present study. Batch adsorption studies were carried out to examine the influence of various parameters such as initial pH, temperature and initial dye concentration. The results indicated that adsorption was strongly pH-dependent and slightly temperature-dependent. At 800 mg l(-1) initial Gemazol turquoise blue-G concentration, dried sugar beet pulp exhibited the highest Gemazol turquoise blue-G uptake capacity of 234.8 mg g(-1) at 25 degrees C and at an initial pH value of 2.0. The Freundlich, Langmuir, Redlich-Peterson and Langmuir-Freundlich, the two and three parameters adsorption models were used for the mathematical description of the biosorption equilibrium and isotherm constants were evaluated depending on temperature. Both the Langmuir and Redlich-Peterson models were applicable for describing the dye biosorption by dried sugar beet pulp in the concentration (100-800 mg l(-1)) and temperature (25-45 degrees C) ranges studied. Simple mass transfer and kinetic models were applied to the experimental data to examine the mechanisms of biosorption and potential rate controlling steps such as external mass transfer, intraparticle diffusion and biosorption process. The sorption process was found to be controlled by both surface and pore diffusion with surface diffusion at the earlier stages followed by pore diffusion at the later stages. Pseudo first-order, pseudo second-order and saturation type kinetic models described the biosorption kinetics accurately at all concentrations and temperatures studied. The thermodynamic analysis indicated that the sorption process was exothermic and the biosorption of dye on dried sugar beet pulp might be physical in nature. SN - 0304-3894 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16603311/Use_of_agricultural_waste_sugar_beet_pulp_for_the_removal_of_Gemazol_turquoise_blue_G_reactive_dye_from_aqueous_solution_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -