Giant mud crab shell biochar: A promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment

Giant mud crab (Scylla serrata sp.) shell prepared through pyrolysis at various temperatures without any modification were characterized for physicochemical properties and methyl violet (MV) removal potential. Hence, this paper investigated the performance and mechanism of biochar derived from giant...

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Main Authors: Azrul Nurfaiz, Mohd Faizal, Nicky Rahmana, Putra, Ahmad Hazim, Abdul Aziz, Agi, Augustine Aja, Muhammad Abbas, Ahmad Zaini
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: Elsevier 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41605/1/Giant%20mud%20crab%20shell%20biochar_%20A%20promising%20adsorbent.pdf
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41605/2/Giant%20mud%20crab%20shell%20biochar_A%20promising%20adsorbent%20for%20methyl.pdf
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author Azrul Nurfaiz, Mohd Faizal
Nicky Rahmana, Putra
Ahmad Hazim, Abdul Aziz
Agi, Augustine Aja
Muhammad Abbas, Ahmad Zaini
author_facet Azrul Nurfaiz, Mohd Faizal
Nicky Rahmana, Putra
Ahmad Hazim, Abdul Aziz
Agi, Augustine Aja
Muhammad Abbas, Ahmad Zaini
author_sort Azrul Nurfaiz, Mohd Faizal
collection UMP
description Giant mud crab (Scylla serrata sp.) shell prepared through pyrolysis at various temperatures without any modification were characterized for physicochemical properties and methyl violet (MV) removal potential. Hence, this paper investigated the performance and mechanism of biochar derived from giant mud crab shell as adsorbent in the removal of methyl violet as well as the potential for regenerating adsorbents via hot water regeneration. The results show that CSB500 (produced through pyrolysis at 500 °C) exhibits a surface area of 59.73 m2/g and mesopore size of 31.3 nm, favorable for methyl violet removal at 3139 mg/g. The equilibrium adsorption data agreed well with Langmuir and Redlich-Peterson isotherm models, indicating a monolayer adsorption of MV. The kinetics data fitted better with both pseudo-first-order and pseudo-second-order models. The intraparticle diffusion and Boyd's models revealed that both film and pore diffusion may be involved in the adsorption process. In hot water regeneration studies, CSB500 shown superior regeneration performance when using water with temperature of 70 °C rather than 30 °C for 9th regeneration cycles, with retained to achieve >90 % MV removal for 6th regeneration cycles. Biochar derived from giant mud crab shell has shown significant promise as a low-cost, effective, and ecologically friendly with reasonably good adsorption capacity and reusability for dye removal, and it can be considered as an environmental sustainability strategy in wastewater treatment.
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spelling UMPir416052024-06-19T08:18:30Z http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41605/ Giant mud crab shell biochar: A promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment Azrul Nurfaiz, Mohd Faizal Nicky Rahmana, Putra Ahmad Hazim, Abdul Aziz Agi, Augustine Aja Muhammad Abbas, Ahmad Zaini TD Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering TP Chemical technology Giant mud crab (Scylla serrata sp.) shell prepared through pyrolysis at various temperatures without any modification were characterized for physicochemical properties and methyl violet (MV) removal potential. Hence, this paper investigated the performance and mechanism of biochar derived from giant mud crab shell as adsorbent in the removal of methyl violet as well as the potential for regenerating adsorbents via hot water regeneration. The results show that CSB500 (produced through pyrolysis at 500 °C) exhibits a surface area of 59.73 m2/g and mesopore size of 31.3 nm, favorable for methyl violet removal at 3139 mg/g. The equilibrium adsorption data agreed well with Langmuir and Redlich-Peterson isotherm models, indicating a monolayer adsorption of MV. The kinetics data fitted better with both pseudo-first-order and pseudo-second-order models. The intraparticle diffusion and Boyd's models revealed that both film and pore diffusion may be involved in the adsorption process. In hot water regeneration studies, CSB500 shown superior regeneration performance when using water with temperature of 70 °C rather than 30 °C for 9th regeneration cycles, with retained to achieve >90 % MV removal for 6th regeneration cycles. Biochar derived from giant mud crab shell has shown significant promise as a low-cost, effective, and ecologically friendly with reasonably good adsorption capacity and reusability for dye removal, and it can be considered as an environmental sustainability strategy in wastewater treatment. Elsevier 2024-04-01 Article PeerReviewed pdf en http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41605/1/Giant%20mud%20crab%20shell%20biochar_%20A%20promising%20adsorbent.pdf pdf en http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41605/2/Giant%20mud%20crab%20shell%20biochar_A%20promising%20adsorbent%20for%20methyl.pdf Azrul Nurfaiz, Mohd Faizal and Nicky Rahmana, Putra and Ahmad Hazim, Abdul Aziz and Agi, Augustine Aja and Muhammad Abbas, Ahmad Zaini (2024) Giant mud crab shell biochar: A promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment. Journal of Cleaner Production, 447 (141637). pp. 1-15. ISSN 0959-6526 (print), 1879-1786 (online). (Published) https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.141637 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.141637
spellingShingle TD Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering
TP Chemical technology
Azrul Nurfaiz, Mohd Faizal
Nicky Rahmana, Putra
Ahmad Hazim, Abdul Aziz
Agi, Augustine Aja
Muhammad Abbas, Ahmad Zaini
Giant mud crab shell biochar: A promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment
title Giant mud crab shell biochar: A promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment
title_full Giant mud crab shell biochar: A promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment
title_fullStr Giant mud crab shell biochar: A promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment
title_full_unstemmed Giant mud crab shell biochar: A promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment
title_short Giant mud crab shell biochar: A promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment
title_sort giant mud crab shell biochar a promising adsorbent for methyl violet removal in wastewater treatment
topic TD Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering
TP Chemical technology
url http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41605/1/Giant%20mud%20crab%20shell%20biochar_%20A%20promising%20adsorbent.pdf
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41605/2/Giant%20mud%20crab%20shell%20biochar_A%20promising%20adsorbent%20for%20methyl.pdf
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