Comparison of the adsorption capacity of acetaminophen on sugarcane bagasse and corn cob by dynamic simulation

Abstract Acetaminophen (ACT), an antipyretic analgesic, is one of the emerging pollutants that has been found in high concentrations in domestic and hospital wastewaters. This study 7the adsorption capacity of sugarcane bagasse (SB) and corn cob (CC) for the ACT removal through the dynamic simulatio...

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Main Author: Diego M. Juela
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:Sustainable Environment Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42834-020-00063-7
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author Diego M. Juela
author_facet Diego M. Juela
author_sort Diego M. Juela
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Acetaminophen (ACT), an antipyretic analgesic, is one of the emerging pollutants that has been found in high concentrations in domestic and hospital wastewaters. This study 7the adsorption capacity of sugarcane bagasse (SB) and corn cob (CC) for the ACT removal through the dynamic simulation of the adsorption column using Aspen Adsorption® V10. The effects of flow rate (1.5–3.0 mL min− 1), ACT initial concentration (40–80 mg L− 1), and bed height (20–35 cm) on the breakthrough curves were studied. Finally, the simulation results were validated with experimental studies, and analyzed by error functions, sum of squared errors (SSE), absolute average deviation (AAD), and coefficient of determination (R2). Based on the predicted breakthrough curves, ACT is adsorbed in greater quantity on CC, with saturation times and adsorption capacity greater than SB in all simulations. The maximum adsorption capacity was 0.47 and 0.32 mg g− 1 for CC and SB, respectively, under condition of flow rate of 1.5 mL min− 1, bed height of 25 cm, and ACT initial concentration of 80 mg L− 1. Breakthrough and saturation times were higher when the column operated at low flow rates, large bed height, and low ACT concentrations, for both adsorbents. The predicted and experimental breakthrough curves satisfactorily coincided with R2 values greater than 0.97, SSE and AAD values ​​less than 5% and 0.2, respectively, for all studies. The experimental adsorption capacity was greater for CC than for SB, thus confirming that the software is able to predict which adsorbent may be more effective for ACT removal. The results of this study would speed up the search for effective materials to remove ACT from wastewaters.
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spelling doaj.art-38f0ec7bd3714b50a3eb67ba7a14f0b42022-12-21T23:53:35ZengBMCSustainable Environment Research2468-20392020-10-0130111310.1186/s42834-020-00063-7Comparison of the adsorption capacity of acetaminophen on sugarcane bagasse and corn cob by dynamic simulationDiego M. Juela0Department of Chemical Engineering, University of CuencaAbstract Acetaminophen (ACT), an antipyretic analgesic, is one of the emerging pollutants that has been found in high concentrations in domestic and hospital wastewaters. This study 7the adsorption capacity of sugarcane bagasse (SB) and corn cob (CC) for the ACT removal through the dynamic simulation of the adsorption column using Aspen Adsorption® V10. The effects of flow rate (1.5–3.0 mL min− 1), ACT initial concentration (40–80 mg L− 1), and bed height (20–35 cm) on the breakthrough curves were studied. Finally, the simulation results were validated with experimental studies, and analyzed by error functions, sum of squared errors (SSE), absolute average deviation (AAD), and coefficient of determination (R2). Based on the predicted breakthrough curves, ACT is adsorbed in greater quantity on CC, with saturation times and adsorption capacity greater than SB in all simulations. The maximum adsorption capacity was 0.47 and 0.32 mg g− 1 for CC and SB, respectively, under condition of flow rate of 1.5 mL min− 1, bed height of 25 cm, and ACT initial concentration of 80 mg L− 1. Breakthrough and saturation times were higher when the column operated at low flow rates, large bed height, and low ACT concentrations, for both adsorbents. The predicted and experimental breakthrough curves satisfactorily coincided with R2 values greater than 0.97, SSE and AAD values ​​less than 5% and 0.2, respectively, for all studies. The experimental adsorption capacity was greater for CC than for SB, thus confirming that the software is able to predict which adsorbent may be more effective for ACT removal. The results of this study would speed up the search for effective materials to remove ACT from wastewaters.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42834-020-00063-7Dynamic simulationAspen adsorption®Sugarcane bagasseCorn cobAcetaminophenAdsorption capacity
spellingShingle Diego M. Juela
Comparison of the adsorption capacity of acetaminophen on sugarcane bagasse and corn cob by dynamic simulation
Sustainable Environment Research
Dynamic simulation
Aspen adsorption®
Sugarcane bagasse
Corn cob
Acetaminophen
Adsorption capacity
title Comparison of the adsorption capacity of acetaminophen on sugarcane bagasse and corn cob by dynamic simulation
title_full Comparison of the adsorption capacity of acetaminophen on sugarcane bagasse and corn cob by dynamic simulation
title_fullStr Comparison of the adsorption capacity of acetaminophen on sugarcane bagasse and corn cob by dynamic simulation
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of the adsorption capacity of acetaminophen on sugarcane bagasse and corn cob by dynamic simulation
title_short Comparison of the adsorption capacity of acetaminophen on sugarcane bagasse and corn cob by dynamic simulation
title_sort comparison of the adsorption capacity of acetaminophen on sugarcane bagasse and corn cob by dynamic simulation
topic Dynamic simulation
Aspen adsorption®
Sugarcane bagasse
Corn cob
Acetaminophen
Adsorption capacity
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42834-020-00063-7
work_keys_str_mv AT diegomjuela comparisonoftheadsorptioncapacityofacetaminophenonsugarcanebagasseandcorncobbydynamicsimulation