Abstract

A comparative study has been conducted on adsorption/desorption of six hazardous organic vapors on synthetic resin (XAD4) and activated carbon, using a differential reactor involving the expansion of a quartz spring. While both sorbents can effectively remove the organic vapors, it was observed that at low concentrations activated carbon adsorbed more organic vapor than synthetic resin. At higher, industrial concentrations, the resins adsorbed more vapor as demonstrated by the slopes of the equilibrium isotherms. The resin also showed much higher desorptlon. The effective Intraparticle diffusion coefficients (De) were observed to be strongly dependent on solute concentration. Pore diffusion dominated the adsorption/desorption of the six organic vapors on XAD4 resin. For the carbon system, pore diffusion dominated the adsorption but surface diffusion contributed to the desorptlon process. This is believed to be due to higher Interaction of the adsorbates with activated carbon.

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