Abstract

Bimetallic metal organic framework (MOF) has garnered interest over the years with its applications in industrial wastewater treatment. In this work, Fe-Al-1,4-benzene-dicarboxylic acid (FeAl(BDC)) MOF was synthesized, and adsorptive removal of Rhodamine B dye in batch and unique hybrid FeAl (BDC)-river sand fixed-bed column was studied. The experimental data from the batch studies corroborated well with the pseudo-second-order (PSO) (R2: 0.97) and Freundlich adsorption isotherm models (R2: 0.98) and achieved a maximum adsorption capacity of 48.59mg/g in 90min. Furthermore, a fixed-bed column study was conducted to assess the effect of varying flow rate (2, 5, 8mL/min), bed height (5, 9, 13cm), and feed concentration (10, 20, 30mg/L) on the adsorption performance of FeAl(BDC) in continuous mode of operation. A uniform mixture of river sand and FeAl(BDC) by weight ratio (9:1) was packed into the column. The sand-FeAl(BDC) fixed-bed column could achieve the maximum adsorption capacity (qexp) of 113.05mg/g at a 5mL/min flow rate, feed concentration of 20mg/L, and a bed height of 13cm. The experimental data of the column study were successfully fitted well with BDST, Thomas (qcal: 114.94mg/g), Yoon-Nelson, and dose-response models (qcal: 113.41mg/g) and R2: 0.97-0.99. The fitting parameter values from the BDST model raise the scope of viable upscaling of the fixed-bed column. In all, it is proposed that these river sand-FeAl(BDC)-based filters can be widely used in areas facing critical contamination and in poor communities with a high demand for water.

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