Abstract
Antibiotic-related environmental contamination directly threatens ecosystems and human health. Adsorption is an efficient and simple treatment process for removing antibiotics from water environments. Attapulgite (ATP) is a natural clay mineral extensively researched as a promising adsorbent material in the food industry, pharmaceutical sanitation, and organic wastewater treatment. Graphene oxide (GO) is widely employed in the treatment of organic wastewater due to its superior physicochemical properties. Here, using high temperature and HCl, ATP was activated (a-ATP), and a GO/a-ATP composite was prepared via hydrothermal synthesis. Using an adsorbent dosage of 0.75 g L−1, pH = 5, reaction time of 120 min, initial temperature = 35 °C, and initial TC concentration of 50 mg L−1, the adsorption capacity of GO/a-ATP for TC was 38.8 mg g−1. The pseudo-first-order model (PFO) and pseudo-second-order (PSO) model were fitted to the kinetic data, and yielded an R2-value of PSO (0.99991) > PFO (0.9389), indicating that the adsorption process is related to chemisorption. Adsorption was also well described by the mixed-order (MO) model (R2 = 0.9827), demonstrating that two rate-limiting adsorption reaction steps, diffusion and adsorption, occur; the former exerting greater influence. Equilibrium data was fitted to Langmuir, Freundlich, and Temkin isotherm models; the Langmuir model gave the best fit, suggesting the adsorption process is a homogeneous and monolayer adsorption process. Various thermodynamic parameters such as standard Gibbs free energy (ΔG0) and standard enthalpy (ΔH0) were also calculated, these results indicate the adsorption reaction is an endothermic process. Our study shows that GO/a-ATP is a promising adsorbent material for use in the adsorption of tetracycline in aquatic environments.
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