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A Revised Pseudo-Second-Order Kinetic Model for Adsorption, Sensitive to Changes in Adsorbate and Adsorbent Concentrations

Jay C. Bullen, Sarawud Saleesongsom, Kerry Gallagher, Dominik Weiß

2021Langmuir235 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The development of new adsorbent materials for the removal of toxic contaminants from drinking water is crucial toward achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 6 (clean water and sanitation). The characterization of these materials includes fitting models of adsorption kinetics to experimental data, most commonly the pseudo-second-order (PSO) model. The PSO model, however, is not sensitive to parameters such as adsorbate and adsorbent concentrations (C0 and Cs) and consequently is not able to predict changes in performance as a function of operating conditions. Furthermore, the experimental conditionality of the PSO rate constant, k2, can lead to erroneous conclusions when comparing literature results. In this study, we analyze 103 kinetic experiments from 47 literature sources to develop a relatively simple modification of the PSO rate equation, yielding dqtdt=k′Ct(1−qtqe)2. Unlike the original PSO model, this revised rate equation (rPSO) provides the first-order and zero-order dependencies upon C0 and Cs that we observe empirically. Our new model reduces the residual sum of squares by 66% when using a single rate constant to model multiple adsorption experiments with varying initial conditions. Furthermore, we demonstrate how the rPSO rate constant k’ is more appropriate for comparing literature studies, highlighting faster kinetics in the adsorption of arsenic onto alumina versus iron oxides. This revised rate equation should find applications in engineering studies, especially since the rPSO rate constant k’ does not show a counter-intuitive inverse relationship with increasing reaction rates when C0 is increased, unlike the PSO rate constant k2.

Topics & Concepts

AdsorptionKinetic energyChemistryThermodynamicsChemical engineeringMaterials scienceChromatographyPhysical chemistryPhysicsEngineeringQuantum mechanicsAdsorption and biosorption for pollutant removalElectrostatics and Colloid Interactions
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