Abstract
Industrialisation and urbanisation contribute greatly to the deposition of toxic waste and metalloids to the environment. Therefore, the use of efficient and eco-friendly materials such as geopolymers and biopolymers is essential for the adsorption of the toxic metals. The implementation of these low-cost sorbents has fascinated a great deal of interest owing to effectiveness, ease of operation, less environmental impact, etc. In this study, biocomposites were synthesised from bio-treatment of geopolymer (kaolin and palm oil fuel ash) using an anionic biopolymer. The biocomposites were utilised as biosorbent for removal of Cu, Fe and Zn in a multi-component system, with the process parameters optimised. FTIR and SEM/EDX outcomes clearly denoted the microporous framework of geopolymer structures and the presence of bio-molecules from the biopolymer. XRD and XRF techniques on the precursors described suitability for geopolymerisation due to the rich aluminate-silicate content. Based on response surface methodology, the adsorption capacities for Cu, Fe and Zn are 35.01mg/g, 45.175mg/g and 44.630mg/g at optimal conditions of pH (7.5), time (40.5min), metal ion concentration (80mg/l), biosorbent dosage (0.2g) and biopolymer concentration (0.75g in 50ml). The multi-component system was apt with the modified competitive Langmuir isotherm which described the homogeneity of the prominent sites of the biocomposites. Based on the adsorption kinetics, Cu was only dominated by the pseudo-first-order reaction (PFOR) while Fe and Zn were influenced by both PFOR and intra-particle diffusion processes. The result obtained from the synthesised biocomposites recommends application to actual wastewater systems.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have