Abstract

In the present study, agricultural biomass—palm kernel shell (PKS) and coconut shell (CS)—was used to produce high porosity bioadsorbent using two-stage continuous physical activation method with different gas carrier (air and N2) in each stage. The activation temperature was set constant at 600, 700, 800 or 900°C for both activation stages with the heating rate of 3°C min−1. Two parameters, the gas carrier and activation temperature, were determined as the significant factors on the adsorption properties of bioadsorbent. BET, SEM, FTIR, TGA, CHNS/O and ash content were used to elucidate the developed bioadsorbent prepared from PKS and CS and its capacity towards the adsorption of methylene blue and iodine. The novel process of two-stage continuous physical activation method was able to expose mesopores and micropores that were previously covered/clogged in nature, and simultaneously create new pores. The synthesized bioadsorbents showed that the surface area (PKS: 456.47 m2 g−1, CS: 479.17 m2 g−1), pore size (PKS: 0.63 nm, CS: 0.62 nm) and pore volume (PKS: 0.13 cm3 g−1, CS: 0.15 cm3 g−1) were significantly higher than that of non-treated bioadsorbent. The surface morphology of the raw materials and synthesized bioadsorbent were accessed by SEM. Furthermore, the novel process meets the recent industrial adsorbent requirements such as low activation temperature, high fixed carbon content, high yield, high adsorption properties and high surface area, which are the key factors for large-scale production of bioadsorbent and its usage.

Highlights

  • Used since the ancient times by Egyptians and Indians, activated carbon is a unique and versatile adsorbent to eliminate undesirable odour, taste, dyes, heavy metals and organic substances

  • The adsorption properties of bioadsorbent derived from H3PO4 pretreated coconut shell (CS) and palm kernel shell (PKS) were compiled in table 1

  • This could potentially be due to the removal of some components, e.g. tar-like matter, and phosphoric acid deposited in pores, which occurred better at higher activation temperature, leading to the development of micropores and mesopores [30]

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Summary

Introduction

Used since the ancient times by Egyptians and Indians, activated carbon is a unique and versatile adsorbent to eliminate undesirable odour, taste, dyes, heavy metals and organic substances. In Malaysia, enormous amounts of palm kernel shell (PKS) and coconut shell (CS) are still underused Both of this lignocellulosic biomass has the aptitude to be used as inexpensive adsorbents as it is an underused resource but practically at hand and sustainable resource [2,3]. High mineral (ash) content in agricultural biomass such as PKS and CS creates a significantly different challenge for preparing highquality activated carbon. Carbon from this high-ash agricultural biomass generated in thermochemical conversion has only been used as a soil amendment or low-grade fuel [7,8]; this inherently limits the market demand for this type of carbon. To unclog the existing mesopores and create micropores, the biomass has to undergo further treatment, physical activation [11]

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