Litcius/Paper detail

Production of Highly Efficient Activated Carbons for Wastewater Treatment from Post‐Consumer PET Plastic Bottle Waste

Olajumoke Alabi‐Babalola, Elizabeth Funmilayo Aransiola, Edidiong Asuquo, Arthur Garforth, Carmine D’Agostino

2024ChemPlusChem15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Chemical activated carbons (PET‐H 2 SO 4 and PET‐KOH) were prepared from post‐consumer polyethylene terephthalate (PET) wastes using pyrolysis under moderate reaction temperatures by changing pyrolysis time and chemical activating agents. The produced carbons were characterized and tested in adsorption reactions of manganese, chromium, and cobalt ions in aqueous solutions. Results showed a high percentage removal of these inorganic ions from water: 98 % for Mn 2+ , 87 % for Cr 3+ , and 88 % for Co 2+ . Freundlich isotherms gave a better fit to the experimental data obtained with good correlation coefficient values in the range of 0.99‐1 compared to other isotherms. The pseudo‐second order kinetic model best described the chemical adsorption process as an exchange of electrons between the carbon and inorganic ions in solutions. The diffusion models showed that the process is controlled by a multi‐kinetic stage adsorption process. In summary, this work demonstrates that the production of activated carbon from PET waste bottles is a potential alternative to commercial activated carbon and can be considered a sustainable waste management technology for removing these non‐biodegradable plastic wastes from the environment.

Topics & Concepts

AdsorptionPyrolysisActivated carbonCarbonizationPolyethylene terephthalateAqueous solutionFreundlich equationMaterials scienceWastewaterCarbon fibersBottleCobaltIon exchangeSorptionChemistryChemical engineeringWaste managementOrganic chemistryIonComposite numberComposite materialEngineeringAdsorption and biosorption for pollutant removalRecycling and Waste Management TechniquesMicroplastics and Plastic Pollution