Heliyon (Dec 2023)

Removal of manganese from wastewater using Moringa stenopetala plant parts as an adsorbent material

  • Ashenafi Zeleke Melaku

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 12
p. e22517

Abstract

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Removal of heavy metal ions from industrial effluents using environmental friendly bioadsorbents is currently promising approach. However, removal of manganese metal ion via Moringa stenopetala (M.stenopetala) plant material is not studied yet. Thus, parts of the plant has been studied as bio adsorbents for removing toxic manganese ion from aqueous solutions in batch adsorption model. The maximum percent removal of manganese ion obtained from laboratory synthetic wastewater at equilibrium are 96.05 %, 98.90 % and 97.93 % by M. stenopetala plant leaf, bark and seed, respectively. However, the use of M. stenopetala plant leaf procedures an intensive color with unpleasant odor, which is inauspicious. Therefore, M. stenopental plant leaf was no longer examined for isotherm and kinetics studies. The fitness of adsorption data were confirmed based on the value of correlation coefficient (R2). Thus, adsorption by bark best fits of Temkin model with R2 value of 0.9707, while adsorption by seed follows the Langmuir model with R2 value of 0.9733. Adsorption kinetics result indicates that pseudo second-order model well fitted with R2 value of 0.9912 and 0.9947 for bark and seed adsorbents, respectively. Additionally, the applicability of laboratory-developed method was also evaluated on a multicomponent real sample taken from KK textile industry from Addis Abeba, Ethiopia. After characterization, the percentage removal of manganese ion were 79.53 % and 88.93 % for bark and seed, respectively. This achievement is promising and in a good agreement with the results of single component laboratory synthetic wastes.

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