| Literature DB >> 21350666 |
Tariq Mahmood Ansari1, Muhammad Asif Hanif, Abida Mahmood, Uzma Ijaz, Muhammad Aslam Khan, Raziya Nadeem, Muhammad Ali.
Abstract
Rosa centifolia and Rosa gruss an teplitz distillation waste biomass was immobilized using sodium alginate for Pb(II) uptake from aqueous solutions under varied experimental conditions. The maximum Pb(II) adsorption occurred at pH 5. Immobilized rose waste biomasses were modified physically and chemically to enhance Pb(II) removal. The Langmuir sorption isotherm and pseudo-second-order kinetic models fitted well to the adsorption data of Pb(II) by immobilized Rosa centifolia and Rosa gruss an teplitz. The adsorbed metal is recovered by treating immobilized biomass with different chemical reagents (H(2)SO(4), HCl and H(3)PO(4)) and maximum Pb(II) recovered when treated with sulphuric acid (95.67%). The presence of cometals Na, Ca(II), Al(III), Cr(III), Cr(VI), and Cu(II), reduced Pb(II) adsorption on Rosa centifolia and Rosa gruss an teplitz waste biomass. It can be concluded from the results of the present study that rose waste can be effectively used for the uptake of Pb(II) from aqueous streams.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21350666 PMCID: PMC3042672 DOI: 10.4061/2011/685023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Res Int ISSN: 2090-3146
Figure 1Effect of pH on Pb(II) uptake by immobilized rose waste biomass.
Figure 2Effect of pH on Pb(II) uptake by immobilized rose waste biomass.
Figure 3Effect of initial metal concentration on Pb(II) uptake by immobilized rose waste biomass.
Comparison between Langmuir and Freundlich adsorption isotherm parameters for Pb(II) sorption by immobilized rose waste biomass.
| Biosorbent | Langmuir isotherm parameters | Experimental value | Freundlich isotherm parameters | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1/ | ||||||||
| 101.01 | 0.2964 | 0.9979 | 97.4 | 117.76 | 1.508 | 0.2809 | 0.5515 | |
| 102.04 | 0.1884 | 0.9932 | 97.2 | 365.51 | 1.9484 | 0.3065 | 0.3965 | |
Figure 4Effect of contact time on Pb(II) uptake by immobilized rose waste biomass.
A comparison between Lagergren pseudo-first-order and pseudo-second-order kinetic models for Pb(II) uptake by immobilized rose waste biomass.
| Biosorbent | Pseudo-first-order kinetic model | Experimental value | Pseudo-second-order kinetic model | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 51.59 | 0.0133 | 0.9455 | 97.399 | 101.01 | 5.99×10−4 | 0.9912 | |
| 147.8 | 1.059 | 0.8786 | 98.67 | 113.64 | 0.774 x10−4 | 0.9585 | |
Figure 5
Figure 6Effect of biosorbent pretreatment on Pb(II) uptake by immobilized rose waste biomass.
Figure 7Effect of contact time on Pb(II) uptake by immobilized rose waste biomass in column setup.
A comparisons between Lagergren pseudo-first-order and pseudo-second-order kinetic models for Pb(II) uptake by immobilized rose waste biomass in column setup.
| Biosorbent | Pseudo-first-order kinetic model | Experimental value | Pseudo-second-order kinetic model | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6.74 | 0.0103 | 0.9806 | 9.122 | 9.98 | 2.93 | 0.9631 | |
| 1.98 | 0.0115 | 0.4495 | 7.028 | 6.83 | 0.09862 × 10−4 | 0.9607 | |
Figure 8Desorption of Pb(II) by immobilized rose waste biomass.
A comparison between immobilized rose waste biomass and previously used biosorbent for the uptake of Pb(II).
| Biosorbent | Uptake capacity (mg/g) | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 97.399 | Present study | |
| 98.67 | ||
| 44.80 | [ | |
| 46.49 | [ | |
| 10.82 | [ | |
| Waste chinese herb Pang Da Hai | 27.10 | [ |
| 92.27 | [ | |
| 96.30 | [ | |
| Brown seaweed | 186 | [ |