Litcius/Paper detail

Pristine wild sugarcane ( <i>Saccharum spontaneum</i> ) as a biosorbent for removal of methylene blue from wastewater: isotherm, kinetics and regeneration studies

Bidisha Bharadwaj, Subhashri Dutta, Md. Atif Qaiyum, Priyanka Priyadarsini Samal, Banashree Dey, Soumen Dey

2023International Journal of Phytoremediation13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Saccharum spontaneum, popularly known as Kashful (KF) is a seasonal perennial grass with thin culms, mostly an abundantly growing shrub during the autumn season in southern Asia. It is used as no-cost scavenger to convincingly arrest methylene blue, a recalcitrant dye from colored effluent. FTIR, FESEM-EDX, and BET surface area characterize the material well whereas the surface activity was evaluated from zero-point charge (pHZPC = 6.720). FTIR highlights the presence of polyphenolic and carboxylate moieties. The surface texture is rod-like with intermittent non-homogeneous pores with occasional fractures. The equilibrium reaches within 60 min with the maximum adsorption capacity of 20.917 mg/g. The fibrous powder of kashful stalk (KFS) follows pseudo-second-order (R2 = 0.999 for linear and R2 = 0.985 for non-linear) kinetics and both Langmuir and Freundlich isotherm model (for linear, Langmuir R2=0.995; for non-linear, R2 = 0.994 for both Langmuir and Freundlich model). The uptake process was spontaneous (ΔG= −3.077 kJ/mol) and endothermic (ΔH = 17.815 kJ/mol). 1:1 methanol could regenerate the dye-loaded material in up to 55% and onward efficiency was conducive for three consecutive cycles. Industrial effluent analysis suggests a real-time removal of ∼55% in the first cycle. Saccharum spontaneum could be exercised to solve environmental problems related to colored water.

Topics & Concepts

Freundlich equationLangmuirChemistryPoint of zero chargeAdsorptionBET theoryEndothermic processNuclear chemistryHorticultureBotanyFourier transform infrared spectroscopyLangmuir adsorption modelOrganic chemistryChemical engineeringBiologyEngineeringAdsorption and biosorption for pollutant removalMembrane Separation Technologies
Pristine wild sugarcane ( <i>Saccharum spontaneum</i> ) as a biosorbent for removal of methylene blue from wastewater: isotherm, kinetics and regeneration studies | Litcius