ChemEngineering (Dec 2023)

Methyl Orange Adsorption on Biochar Obtained from <i>Prosopis juliflora</i> Waste: Thermodynamic and Kinetic Study

  • Carlos Diaz-Uribe,
  • Jarith Ortiz,
  • Freider Duran,
  • William Vallejo,
  • Jayson Fals

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/chemengineering7060114
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
p. 114

Abstract

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In the information contained herein, we fabricated biochar by means of a pyrolysis process; it used Prosopis juliflora waste (PJW) as a biomass source. The physical and chemical material characterization was carried out through FTIR, thermogravimetric, BET-N2 isotherm, and SEM-EDX assays. We studied the methylene orange (MO) adsorption onto PWJ biochar. The PJW biochar displayed a maximum percentage of MO removal of 64%. The results of the adsorption study indicated that Temkin isotherm was suitable to describe the MO adsorption process on PJW biochar; it suggests that the MO adsorption on PJW biochar could be a multi-layer adsorption process. Results showed that the pseudo-second-order model was accurate in demonstrating the MO adsorption on PJW (k2 = 0.295 g mg−1min−1; qe = 8.31 mg g−1). Furthermore, the results made known that the MO removal by PJW biochar was endothermic (ΔH = 12.7 kJ/mol) and a spontaneous process (ΔG = −0.954 kJ/mol). The reusability test disclosed that after four consecutive adsorption/desorption cycles, the PWJ biochar reduced its MO removal by only 4.3%.

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