Abstract

Carbon nanotubes with multiple walls (MWCNTs) were modified via green synthesis methodology, with metal nanoparticles (MPNs-Fe). The prepared material (MWCNT/MPNs-Fe) was characterized and used to remove the herbicide glyphosate (GLY) from an aqueous matrix through the adsorption process. The characterization results indicated the presence of MPNs-Fe incorporated between the tangled wires of the MWCNTs, thus confirming the green synthesis success. The kinetic studies showed a percentage of GLY removal of up to 86.23% (for C0 = 35 mg L−1), with the process equilibrium being reached in 120 min. The pseudo-first-order model demonstrated a greater prediction capacity for the system. The Sips isotherm model was best suited to the equilibrium data, providing a maximum adsorption capacity of 43.66 mg g−1 (298 K). The thermodynamic behavior showed that the process is spontaneous and favorable, with exothermic nature. The material's application in close to real circumstances presented the removals of 68.38% and 40.33% for two simulated effluents with different compositions. The adsorption regeneration tests found that the adsorption kept similar adsorption capacities after six cycles. Therefore, it can be concluded that the MWCNT/MPNs-Fe synthesized in the present work is a promising alternative as an adsorbent in the treatment of effluents and waters containing GLY.

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