Abstract

The presence of synthetic dyes in water causes serious environmental issues owing to the low water quality, toxicity to environment and human carcinogenic effects. Adsorption has emerged as simple and environmental benign processes for wastewater treatment. This work reports the use of porous Fe-based composites as adsorbents for Acid Red 66 dye removal in an aqueous solution. The porous FeC and Fe/FeC solids were prepared by hydrothermal methods using iron sulfates and sucrose as precursors. The physicochemical properties of the solids were evaluated through X-ray diffraction (XRD), Scanning electron microscopy coupled with Energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Fourier transform infrared s (FTIR), Raman and Mössbauer spectroscopies, nitrogen adsorption–desorption isotherms, Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) and magnetic saturation techniques. Results indicated that the Fe species holds magnetic properties and formed well dispersed Fe3O4 nanoparticles on a carbon layer in FeC nanocomposite. Adding iron to the previous solid resulted in the formation of γ-Fe2O3 coating on the FeC type structure as in Fe/FeC composite. The highest dye adsorption capacity was 15.5 mg·g−1 for FeC nanocomposite at 25 °C with the isotherms fitting well with the Langmuir model. The removal efficiency of 98.4% was obtained with a pristine Fe sample under similar experimental conditions.

Highlights

  • The synthetic dyes are widely used by several industries such as textile, painting, leather and printing

  • This study presents a detailed investigation about preparation of the with sole intention to prove a potential application of the Fe-based composites

  • The above mentioned bands are observable in all solids studied

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Summary

Introduction

The synthetic dyes are widely used by several industries such as textile, painting, leather and printing. The discharge of the dyes in water effluents continues to be one of the greatest health problems worldwide, affecting human health and the environment [1,2,3]. Most of the synthetic dyes are non-biodegradable causing harm to human health, when expose directly to this type of dye wastewater [3,5]. These problems accelerate rules and strict regulations for textile dyeing industries promoting a scientific interest to achieve environmental sustainable chemical routes and protocols to removal of dye colorants in textile wastewater [6,7]

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