Abstract

This study aimed to solve environmental problems, particularly water quality and escalating crime rates. The carbon hollow nanosphere was prepared from orange peels by a reflux method. The carbon hollow nanosphere was coated with Gamma-aluminium oxide (γ-Al2O3 NPs) via the hydrothermal method. The samples were analysed using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, Scanning electron microscopy, Transmission Electron Microscopy, Brunauer–Emmett–Teller, Thermogravimetric analysis, and X-Ray diffraction analysis. The surface area of γ-Al2O3/carbon hollow nanosphere nanocomposite was confirmed to be 578,039 m2/g, and the Ni2+ ions were analysed using ICP-OES. With a maximum adsorption capacity of 56.980 mg/g and a pH 9, batch adsorption experiments revealed that the uptake of Ni2+ ions best fitted the Langmuir adsorption isotherm, and the pseudo-second-order kinetics model effectively described the uptake of Ni2+ ions with a higher R2 of 0.999. Thermodynamic measurements showed the endothermic and spontaneous nature of the Ni2+ ions adsorption using the γ-Al2O3/carbon hollow nanospheres nanocomposite. The adsorbent was then used to identify latent blood fingerprints, and it was discovered that Ni2+-γ-Al2O3/carbon hollow nanosphere generated clear images of blood fingerprints on different substrates.Graphical abstract

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