| Literature DB >> 34141930 |
Harshitha Kamath Miyar1, Annapoorna Pai1, Louella Concepta Goveas1.
Abstract
Use of novel biological materials as adsorbents for removal of xenobiotics is gaining significance owing to their exceptional advantages. An extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) produced by Lysinibacillus sp. SS1 had rough porous surface as observed by SEM analysis. Adsorption ability of EPS was estimated against various textile dyes such as Malachite Green (MG), Methyl Orange, Congo Red and Coomassie Blue. About 82% of MG (100 mg/L) was adsorbed onto 2.5 mg EPS within 30 min. Effect of MG concentration, EPS weight, agitation speed and incubation time on adsorption, studied by one factor at a time approach, revealed that adsorption was influenced by all factors. Maximum adsorption of 99.01 ± 0.61% was achieved at 100 mg/L MG, 10 mg EPS, 120 RPM in 75 min with maximum adsorption capacity of 247.5 mg/g. Kinetics was affected by MG and EPS amounts, with shift from pseudo first to pseudo second order with increase in concentration. Adsorption of MG by EPS of Lysinibacillus sp. SS1 was identified as unilayer chemisorption as it followed Langmuir isotherm with maximum adsorption capacity (Q m ) of 178.57 mg/g (R 2 = 0.9889). This is the first report on potential of EPS produced by Lysinibacillus sp. SS1 as novel biodegradable adsorbent with high efficacy of MG removal from aqueous solutions.Entities:
Keywords: Adsorption kinetics; EPS; Lysinibacillus sp. SS1; Malachite Green
Year: 2021 PMID: 34141930 PMCID: PMC8188059 DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e07169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heliyon ISSN: 2405-8440
Adsorption of MG by various adsorbents.
| Adsorbent | MG (mg/L) | % Adsorption | Time (min) | Kinetics | Isotherms | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silica/rice husk composite | 200 | 97.11 | - | PSO | Freundlich | [ |
| Mesoporous magnetic biochar | 100 | 98.9 | 20 | PSO | Langmuir | [ |
| EPS stabilized iron oxide nanoparticles | 100 | 93.77 | 6 | PFO | - | [ |
| Cellulose nanofibrils aerogel | 100 | 92 | - | PSO | Langmuir | [ |
| 50 | 92.8 | 120 | PSO | Langmuir | [ | |
| 50 | 85.2 | - | - | Langmuir | [ | |
| 100 | 85 | 360 | PSO | Langmuir | [ | |
| EPS of | 100 | 99.01 | 75 | PFO | Langmuir |
Figure 1Surface and elemental composition of EPS produced by Lysinibacillus sp. SS1 visualized by SEM (A) and EDS (B) analysis.
Figure 2Adsorption of dyes by EPS produced by Lysinibacillus sp. SS1.
Figure 3Effect of variation in MG (A); EPS (B); agitation speed (C) and time of incubation (D) on the adsorption of MG by EPS produced by Lysinibacillus sp. SS1.
Figure 4Decolorization of MG on addition of different weights of purified EPS produced by Lysinibacillus sp. SS1 after 30 min (A) and 75 min (B) of incubation.
Figure 5Kinetics of adsorption of different concentrations of MG (100–200 mg/L) by 2.5 mg EPS of Lysinibacillus sp. SS1: PFO (A); PSO (B) and intraparticle diffusion (C).
Kinetics of Adsorption of MG by EPS produced by Lysinibacillus sp. SS1.
| Kinetic Parameters | MG (mg/L) | EPS (mg) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | 150 | 200 | 2.5 | 5 | 10 | |
| 979.031 | 1414.6 | 1746.51 | 979.031 | 490.2 | 247.623 | |
| 0.08 | 0.061 | 0.0794 | ||||
| 3122.48 | 3657.1 | 201.1 | ||||
| 0.9023 | 0.8813 | 0.9585 | ||||
| 1.00E-03 | 1.00E-03 | 4.65E-04 | ||||
| 1111.11 | 1111.11 | 500 | ||||
| 0.9853 | 0.9853 | 0.9938 | ||||
Figure 6Kinetics of adsorption of 100 mg/L MG by different weights of EPS (2.5–10 mg) of Lysinibacillus sp. SS1: PFO (A); PSO (B) and intraparticle diffusion (C).
Figure 7Isotherms describing equilibrium studies of 100 mg/L MG adsorption by EPS (10 mg) of Lysinibacillus sp. SS1: Langmuir isotherm (A), Freundlich isotherm (B) and Temkin isotherm (C).