Heavy Netals determination in Tea and its removal utillising Cattals, Typha Spp

In this work, dried Typha angustifolia (T A) leaves also known as the common cattail were used as an adsorbent in Pb(II) adsorption in synthetic aqueous solutions. Adsorption studies were conducted in batch mode. Batch adsorption studies using T A were conducted and proved to be able to adsorb Pb(II...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liew, Sharain Yen Ling, Chong, Harry Lye Hin, How, Siew Eng
Format: Research Report
Language:English
English
Published: Universiti Malaysia Sabah 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23069/1/Heavy%20metals%20determination%20in%20tea%20and%20its%20removal%20utilising%20cattails%2C%20typha.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23069/7/Heavy%20Netals%20determination%20in%20Tea%20and%20its%20removal%20utillising%20Cattals%2C%20Typha%20Spp.pdf
_version_ 1796910159023308800
author Liew, Sharain Yen Ling
Chong, Harry Lye Hin
How, Siew Eng
author_facet Liew, Sharain Yen Ling
Chong, Harry Lye Hin
How, Siew Eng
author_sort Liew, Sharain Yen Ling
collection UMS
description In this work, dried Typha angustifolia (T A) leaves also known as the common cattail were used as an adsorbent in Pb(II) adsorption in synthetic aqueous solutions. Adsorption studies were conducted in batch mode. Batch adsorption studies using T A were conducted and proved to be able to adsorb Pb(II) effectively with the optimized dosage of 0.6g. Adsorption equilibrium was achieved within 8 hours with an effective removal percentage of 86.04%. Adsorption kinetics was further evaluated using four kinetic models such as the pseudo-first order, pseudo-second order, intraparticIe diffusion and Elovich model. Fitting of the data were done based on linear regression analysis. The sorption kinetic data fitted best to the pseudo-second order model with an R2 of 0.9979 followed closely by the Elovich model with an R2 of 0.9952. For the isothenn studies, the adsorption system fitted the Langmuir model best as compared to the Freundlich, Temkin and D-R model. The R2 achieved for the Langmuir model was 0.9903. The maximum adsorption capacity calculated from the Langmuir model was 51.02 mg/g with a maximum removal after 24 hours at 89%. This proves that adsorption occurred via monolayer coverage of the adsorbate at the outer layer of the adsorbent. The optimized adsorption conditions were then applied to tea infusion that has been initially spiked with a fixed concentration of lead. Three types of brands of teas were used which were Lipton, Boh and Sabah tea. In all 3 brands, the concentration of lead found was below 0.2 mg/g. Each brand was then spiked with different concentrations of lead to investigate the effects of the presence of caffeine in tea towards the adsorption performance of the leaves. It was found that the adsorption performance of the leaves increased with increasing amounts of lead in the tea infusion which was contrary to in distilled water. The percentage of removal achieved in tea infusion was 38.22% (Lipton), 36.23% (Boh) and 29.86% (Sabah tea) as compared to water at 6% for 1000 mg/L of lead. From the study, dried Typha angustifolia successfully adsorbed lead in both water and tea infusion with the performance improving in the presence of tea.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T03:00:18Z
format Research Report
id ums.eprints-23069
institution Universiti Malaysia Sabah
language English
English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T03:00:18Z
publishDate 2008
publisher Universiti Malaysia Sabah
record_format dspace
spelling ums.eprints-230692020-09-30T03:01:46Z https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23069/ Heavy Netals determination in Tea and its removal utillising Cattals, Typha Spp Liew, Sharain Yen Ling Chong, Harry Lye Hin How, Siew Eng TX Home economics In this work, dried Typha angustifolia (T A) leaves also known as the common cattail were used as an adsorbent in Pb(II) adsorption in synthetic aqueous solutions. Adsorption studies were conducted in batch mode. Batch adsorption studies using T A were conducted and proved to be able to adsorb Pb(II) effectively with the optimized dosage of 0.6g. Adsorption equilibrium was achieved within 8 hours with an effective removal percentage of 86.04%. Adsorption kinetics was further evaluated using four kinetic models such as the pseudo-first order, pseudo-second order, intraparticIe diffusion and Elovich model. Fitting of the data were done based on linear regression analysis. The sorption kinetic data fitted best to the pseudo-second order model with an R2 of 0.9979 followed closely by the Elovich model with an R2 of 0.9952. For the isothenn studies, the adsorption system fitted the Langmuir model best as compared to the Freundlich, Temkin and D-R model. The R2 achieved for the Langmuir model was 0.9903. The maximum adsorption capacity calculated from the Langmuir model was 51.02 mg/g with a maximum removal after 24 hours at 89%. This proves that adsorption occurred via monolayer coverage of the adsorbate at the outer layer of the adsorbent. The optimized adsorption conditions were then applied to tea infusion that has been initially spiked with a fixed concentration of lead. Three types of brands of teas were used which were Lipton, Boh and Sabah tea. In all 3 brands, the concentration of lead found was below 0.2 mg/g. Each brand was then spiked with different concentrations of lead to investigate the effects of the presence of caffeine in tea towards the adsorption performance of the leaves. It was found that the adsorption performance of the leaves increased with increasing amounts of lead in the tea infusion which was contrary to in distilled water. The percentage of removal achieved in tea infusion was 38.22% (Lipton), 36.23% (Boh) and 29.86% (Sabah tea) as compared to water at 6% for 1000 mg/L of lead. From the study, dried Typha angustifolia successfully adsorbed lead in both water and tea infusion with the performance improving in the presence of tea. Universiti Malaysia Sabah 2008 Research Report NonPeerReviewed text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23069/1/Heavy%20metals%20determination%20in%20tea%20and%20its%20removal%20utilising%20cattails%2C%20typha.pdf text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23069/7/Heavy%20Netals%20determination%20in%20Tea%20and%20its%20removal%20utillising%20Cattals%2C%20Typha%20Spp.pdf Liew, Sharain Yen Ling and Chong, Harry Lye Hin and How, Siew Eng (2008) Heavy Netals determination in Tea and its removal utillising Cattals, Typha Spp. (Unpublished)
spellingShingle TX Home economics
Liew, Sharain Yen Ling
Chong, Harry Lye Hin
How, Siew Eng
Heavy Netals determination in Tea and its removal utillising Cattals, Typha Spp
title Heavy Netals determination in Tea and its removal utillising Cattals, Typha Spp
title_full Heavy Netals determination in Tea and its removal utillising Cattals, Typha Spp
title_fullStr Heavy Netals determination in Tea and its removal utillising Cattals, Typha Spp
title_full_unstemmed Heavy Netals determination in Tea and its removal utillising Cattals, Typha Spp
title_short Heavy Netals determination in Tea and its removal utillising Cattals, Typha Spp
title_sort heavy netals determination in tea and its removal utillising cattals typha spp
topic TX Home economics
url https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23069/1/Heavy%20metals%20determination%20in%20tea%20and%20its%20removal%20utilising%20cattails%2C%20typha.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23069/7/Heavy%20Netals%20determination%20in%20Tea%20and%20its%20removal%20utillising%20Cattals%2C%20Typha%20Spp.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT liewsharainyenling heavynetalsdeterminationinteaanditsremovalutillisingcattalstyphaspp
AT chongharrylyehin heavynetalsdeterminationinteaanditsremovalutillisingcattalstyphaspp
AT howsieweng heavynetalsdeterminationinteaanditsremovalutillisingcattalstyphaspp