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Investigation kinetics mechanisms of adsorption malachite green onto activated carbon.
J Hazard Mater. 2007 Jul 19; 146(1-2):194-203.JH

Abstract

Lignite was used to prepare activated carbon (T3K618) by chemical activation with KOH. Pore properties of the activated carbon such as BET surface area, pore volume, pore size distribution, and pore diameter were characterized by t-plot based on N2 adsorption isotherm. BET surface area of activated carbon is determined as 1000 m2/g. Adsorption capacity of malachite green (MG) onto T3K618 activated carbon was investigated in a batch system by considering the effects of various parameters like initial concentration (100, 150 and 200 mg/L) and temperature (25, 40 and 50 degrees C). The adsorption process was relatively fast and equilibrium was reached after about 20 min for 100, 150 mg/L at all adsorption temperature. Equilibrium time for 200 mg/L was determined as 20 min and 40 min at 298, 313 and 323 K, respectively. Simple mass and kinetic models were applied to the experimental data to examine the mechanisms of adsorption and potential rate controlling steps such as external mass transfer, intraparticle diffusion. Pseudo second-order model was found to explain the kinetics of MG adsorption most effectively. It was found that both mass transfer and pore diffusion are important in determining the adsorption rates. The intraparticle diffusion rate constant, external mass transfer coefficient, film and pore diffusion coefficient at various temperatures were evaluated. The activation energy (Ea) was determined as 48.56, 63.16, 67.93 kJ/mol for 100, 150, 200 mg/L, respectively. The Langmiur and Freundlich isotherm were used to describe the adsorption equilibrium studies at different temperatures. Langmiur isotherm shows better fit than Freundlich isotherm in the temperature range studied. The thermodynamic parameters, such as DeltaG degrees, DeltaS and DeltaH degrees were calculated. The thermodynamics of dyes-T3K618 system indicates endothermic process.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Inonu University, Faculty of Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering, 44280 Malatya, Turkey. yonal@inonu.edu.trNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

17194532

Citation

Onal, Y, et al. "Investigation Kinetics Mechanisms of Adsorption Malachite Green Onto Activated Carbon." Journal of Hazardous Materials, vol. 146, no. 1-2, 2007, pp. 194-203.
Onal Y, Akmil-Başar C, Sarici-Ozdemir C. Investigation kinetics mechanisms of adsorption malachite green onto activated carbon. J Hazard Mater. 2007;146(1-2):194-203.
Onal, Y., Akmil-Başar, C., & Sarici-Ozdemir, C. (2007). Investigation kinetics mechanisms of adsorption malachite green onto activated carbon. Journal of Hazardous Materials, 146(1-2), 194-203.
Onal Y, Akmil-Başar C, Sarici-Ozdemir C. Investigation Kinetics Mechanisms of Adsorption Malachite Green Onto Activated Carbon. J Hazard Mater. 2007 Jul 19;146(1-2):194-203. PubMed PMID: 17194532.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Investigation kinetics mechanisms of adsorption malachite green onto activated carbon. AU - Onal,Y, AU - Akmil-Başar,C, AU - Sarici-Ozdemir,C, Y1 - 2006/12/15/ PY - 2006/06/28/received PY - 2006/12/04/revised PY - 2006/12/04/accepted PY - 2006/12/30/pubmed PY - 2007/9/5/medline PY - 2006/12/30/entrez SP - 194 EP - 203 JF - Journal of hazardous materials JO - J Hazard Mater VL - 146 IS - 1-2 N2 - Lignite was used to prepare activated carbon (T3K618) by chemical activation with KOH. Pore properties of the activated carbon such as BET surface area, pore volume, pore size distribution, and pore diameter were characterized by t-plot based on N2 adsorption isotherm. BET surface area of activated carbon is determined as 1000 m2/g. Adsorption capacity of malachite green (MG) onto T3K618 activated carbon was investigated in a batch system by considering the effects of various parameters like initial concentration (100, 150 and 200 mg/L) and temperature (25, 40 and 50 degrees C). The adsorption process was relatively fast and equilibrium was reached after about 20 min for 100, 150 mg/L at all adsorption temperature. Equilibrium time for 200 mg/L was determined as 20 min and 40 min at 298, 313 and 323 K, respectively. Simple mass and kinetic models were applied to the experimental data to examine the mechanisms of adsorption and potential rate controlling steps such as external mass transfer, intraparticle diffusion. Pseudo second-order model was found to explain the kinetics of MG adsorption most effectively. It was found that both mass transfer and pore diffusion are important in determining the adsorption rates. The intraparticle diffusion rate constant, external mass transfer coefficient, film and pore diffusion coefficient at various temperatures were evaluated. The activation energy (Ea) was determined as 48.56, 63.16, 67.93 kJ/mol for 100, 150, 200 mg/L, respectively. The Langmiur and Freundlich isotherm were used to describe the adsorption equilibrium studies at different temperatures. Langmiur isotherm shows better fit than Freundlich isotherm in the temperature range studied. The thermodynamic parameters, such as DeltaG degrees, DeltaS and DeltaH degrees were calculated. The thermodynamics of dyes-T3K618 system indicates endothermic process. SN - 0304-3894 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17194532/Investigation_kinetics_mechanisms_of_adsorption_malachite_green_onto_activated_carbon_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0304-3894(06)01435-X DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -