Yanzhuo Zhang1, Huilin Wan1, Jing Zhao2, Jun Li3. 1. School of Environment, Henan Normal University, Key Laboratory for Yellow River and Huai River Water Environmental and Pollution Control, Ministry of Education, Henan Key Laboratory for Environmental Pollution Control Xinxiang Henan 453007 P. R. China 83995983@qq.com 2205374076@qq.com. 2. School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Henan Normal University Xinxiang Henan 453007 P. R. China 124236932@qq.com. 3. The College of Architecture and Civil Engineering, The Key Laboratory of Beijing for Water Quality Science & Water Environment Recovery Engineering, Beijing University of Technology Beijing 100124 China lijunbjut@163.com.
Triphenylmethane dyes and azo dyes are widely used for various applications in the food, textile, paper, plastic, and rubber industries.[1-4] Sunset yellow (SY), Carmine (CM), and Lemon yellow (LY) dyes are typical azo dyes and are widely used for coloring and medicine. Malachite green (MG) and Crystal violet (CV) are triphenylmethane dyes, positive charged in aqueous solution, and used as fish fungicides and as biological dye materials. However, pollution due to wastewater containing dyes presents a serious environmental problem. The release of dye molecules into the environment leads to direct and indirect risks to aquatic and human life.[5-9] When triphenylmethane and azo dyes enter the human body, they may cause harm to the kidneys and liver, and can induce teratogenicity, carcinogenicity and mutagenicity.[10-14] Additionally, intermediate products (anilines) produced within the human body will cause further harm to human health.[15-18] Diverse techniques have been applied for the removal of dye from wastewater, including physical, chemical, and biological approaches. Among these methods, adsorption is superior to other methods due to its efficiency, lack of secondary pollution, and inexpensive usage.[19]There is significant interest in exploring agricultural waste as a biological material for dye removal, due to its abundance, availability, and low price. Materials that have been tested for this purpose include chitin, de-oiled soya, mangrove bark, peanut hull, modified tilapia fish scales, grapefruit peel, citric acid-esterifying wheat straw, opal dye sludge, orange peel, sulfuric acid-activated rice husk carbon, and biocomposite.[20-30]Various Chrysanthemums are cultivated in China, including Huai Flos Chrysanthemum (HFC), which has high medicinal value and can be used directly or, most commonly, used as a tea.[31] The output of HFC is about 1500 tons in china each year, and about 1000 tons of HFC are discarded after use. Therefore, discarded HFC is an abundant agricultural waste, with some Chrysanthemum material recycled and used for biodiesel[32] and microbial fuel cells.[33] Most used Chrysanthemum material is discarded or burned, which may cause environmental pollution and is a waste of biological resources.[34,35] HFC contains many functional groups, such as carbonyl, carboxyl, methyl, and hydroxyl groups. Therefore, the development of HFC-based biosorbents for the removal of dyes is a promising strategy to recycle this abundant and low-cost bio-resource.According to the results of this experiment, raw HFC shows good biosorbent adsorption of cationic dyes (CV and MG). In addition, HFC modified with chitosan oligosaccharide (HFC@CO) is an efficient biosorbent for anionic dyes (SY, LY, and CM). CO has a strong affinity for protons due to its abundance of amino groups. Thus, there is strong electrostatic interaction between CO (positive charge) and anionic dyes (negative charge) that facilitate the use of CO for dye wastewater treatment. To our knowledge, most studies of biosorbent have described material able to adsorb only a single kind of dye (anionic or cationic), limiting its use. Additionally, there has been no report of the use of raw or modified HFC (HFC@CO) as a biosorbent to remove dyes of different charges (anionic and cationic dyes).In this work, HFC and HFC@CO were firstly used as biosorbent material for the removal of anionic and cationic dyes under different conditions. The primary objectives of this work were to: (1) determine the optimal temperature, dosage, and dye concentrations for batch adsorption; (2) characterize the biomaterial properties of HFC and HFC@CO using Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), Fourier transform infrared (FTIR), Thermogravimetric Analysis (TGA), BET (Brunauer–Emmett–Teller) and the Barrett–Joyner–Halenda (BJH) method; (3) analyze the fit of the data to the isothermal adsorption and adsorption kinetic models, and determine the thermodynamic parameters of the adsorption process.
Materials and methods
Preparation of the HFC and modification with CO
Raw HFC was obtained from Jiaozuo City, China. The HFC sample was washed several times with distilled water and ethanol to remove fly ash, dust, and other inorganic impurities. Next, the HFC was dried in an oven at 70 °C for 36 h until completely dry. The HFC was then crushed and screened to select powder containing particle sizes of 0.125–0.150 mm for batch adsorption. Finally, the obtained HFC was sealed and stored for further use or modification (ESI†).For the modification process, 4 g of CO (colloidal solution) was added to a vessel with 1000 mL distilled water and stirred until the CO solution was completely dissolved, producing a light-brown viscous solution. To this solution, 10 g HFC was added and mixed using a mechanical agitator at room temperature for 6 h. Finally, the modified HFC material, HFC@CO, was precipitated, vacuum filtered, and dried at 70 °C for 36 h. The color changed to deep brown after modification and after adsorption, the color changed from brown to a range of colors (ESI†).
Reagents
Anionic and cation dyes were obtained from Aladdin Co., Ltd., China. Chitosan oligosaccharide (MW = 5000, purity > 97%, powder) was purchased from Hefei Bomei Biotechnology Co., Ltd., China. The specifications of the experimental dyes are listed in Table 1.
The quality of dyes used in this work
Name
Characteristics
Molecular weight
Wavelength
Molecular formula
Crystal violet, CV
Cationic dye
407.98
580
C25H30N3Cl·9H2O
Malachite green, MG
Cationic dye
364.92
617
C23H25CIN2
Sunset yellow, SY
Anionic dye
452.37
482
C16H10N2Na2O7S2
Lemon yellow, LY
Anionic dye
534.36
426
C16H9N4O9S2Na3
Carmine, CM
Anionic dye
604.47
506
C20H11N2Na3O10S3
Adsorption experiments
The dye adsorption tests were conducted in a conical flask containing 250 mL of dye solution. The mixtures were agitated in a water bath shaker at a shaking rate of 180 rpm at different temperatures until reaching equilibrium. Each experiment was performed for 6 h. Samples were removed at certain time intervals, centrifuged at 3200 rpm for 2 min, and then analyzed using a UV-765 spectrophotometer (UV-752n, Shanghai Precision and Scientific Instrument Co., Ltd). During the batch adsorption process, the pH of the solution was adjusted as necessary by addition of 1 M HCl or 1 M NaOH.Adsorption tests were conducted using different dosages of HFC and HFC@CO (1–5 g L−1) for cationic dyes (CV or MG) and anionic dyes (SY, LY, or CM) in a conical flask containing 250 mL of the dye solution (50–500 mg L−1) at various pH values (2–12) and temperature (5–50 °C). The change in dye concentration was measured at certain time intervals (1, 3, 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 50, 70, and 90 min).
Data analysis
After achievement of batch adsorption equilibrium, the adsorbing capacity and removal rate (R) of dyes were calculated as follows:where, qe is the equilibrium adsorption capacity of the adsorbent, mg g−1; C0 is the initial concentration of the dye, mg L−1; Ce is the liquid-phase dye concentration at equilibrium, mg L−1; V is the volume of the solution, L; M is the dosage of the adsorbent, g.
Regeneration of HFC and HFC@CO
The regeneration of used HFC and HFC@CO biosorbent for further dye removal was tested using batch processes. In batch desorption, the HFC and HFC@CO was exhausted by immersion of 2–3 g L−1 biosorbent into the dye solution using 1 M NaOH solution (for anionic dyes) or absolute ethyl alcohol (for cationic dyes) as the desorption agent for 2 h. The desorption conditions were identical to those used for adsorption. The regeneration of HFC and HFC@CO was evaluated over four successive regeneration cycles.
Results and discussion
Characteristics of biosorbent
SEM analysis
The morphological structures of HFC and HFC@CO were characterized by SEM (Quanta 200, FEI, USA). HFC was composed of volatile oils, stevia, and saccharides. The data shows that the raw HFC has high porosity (ESI†). After loading with CO, the surface of the HFC became smoother as it was filled with CO during the modification process, but its porous morphology remained. The loaded CO and numerous tiny pores facilitated dye collection and adsorption.
FTIR analysis
FT-IR was performed on an Alpha Infrared Spectrometer (Bruker, Germany). The main spectral peaks of functional groups were observed at 3358, 2928, 1733, 1646, 1383, 1158, 1243, 1048, 861, and 756 cm−1 in raw HFC (ESI†). The distinct band at 3358 cm−1 may indicate the O–H stretching vibration of stevia and saccharides. The distinct band at 2928 cm−1 was attributed to the stretch vibration of C–H bond and the bond at 1383 cm−1 was assigned to C–H bending vibrations in the methyl and methylene groups. The peak at 1733 cm−1 was assigned to CO stretching vibrations. The strong band at 1646 cm−1 was ascribed to N–H bend vibrations. The peak at 1158 cm−1 was attributed to C–O stretching vibration, indicating the presence of carboxyl groups on the HFC. The peak at 1243 cm−1 and a weak band at around 1048 cm−1 may be due to C–O stretching vibrations in alcohols, phenols, or ether groups. There was no change after adsorption of CV and MG by raw HFC.There was no obvious change after modification other than a slight change in the position of the main spectral peaks in the modified HFC@CO (ESI†). The new band at 2356 cm−1 may represent the amino group (–NH2), indicating the successful loading of amino groups on the surface of HFC@CO. The new band at around 1459 cm−1 may be attributed to C–H bending vibrations in methyl and methylene groups. The 1408 cm−1 band may be due to CC skeletal vibrations. Additionally, the strong peak of HFC@CO at1079 cm−1 C–O–C band at around 1026 cm−1 confirmed the presence of saccharides. The data shows the FTIR spectra of the modified HFC@CO after the adsorption of dyes (ESI†). The peak at 1727 cm−1 disappeared after dye adsorption, suggesting CO occupied the active sites of the HFC@CO. In addition, a new peak of HFC@CO at 1523 cm−1 after adsorption indicated the presence of aromatic heterocyclic material in the azo dyes, demonstrating the adsorption of dyes on HFC@CO.
BET and BJH analysis
The N2 adsorption–desorption isotherm values for HFC and HFC@CO were analyzed (ESI†). The obtained N2 adsorption isotherm values are similar to that of the type IV isotherm (in IUPAC classification).[36] This pattern is consistent with a multi-layer reversible process describing the interaction between biosorbent and dyes. The substitution of the measured values into the BET equation allowed the determination of a calculated surface area for HFC and HFC@CO of 47.67 and 40.17 m2 g−1, respectively (ESI†). The total pore volume and average pore diameters were 0.4919 cm3 g−1 and 21.63 nm for HFC and 0.4398 cm3 g−1 and 18.61 nm for HFC@CO, respectively. Although the specific surface area decreased, different properties of dyes can adsorbed by HFC@CO and amplify the scope of its use after modification.
TG analysis
The chitosan oligosaccharide-modified Huai Flos Chrysanthemum was further measured by TGA under air condition. The weight loss curves for raw HFC and HFC@CO were analyzed. The thermal stability was divided into three stages (ESI†). First, for HFC and HFC@CO, the weight loss between 20 and 230 °C was due to the release of free water and the structural water of biosorbents. Next, between 230 and 500–550 °C, oxygenolysis of the carbonaceous material occurred under air. Then, the weight loss remained stable above 550 °C due to the disappearance of carbon substances. For the overall TGA process, the proportion of weight loss was 90% and 95% for the HFC@CO and HFC, respectively. Overall, the results indicate the successful modification of HFC by chitosan oligosaccharide.
Parameters affecting dye adsorption
Effect of pH and dosage
The surface charge of HFC@CO and the ionization degree of the dyes were strongly affected by the solution pH. Fig. 1a shows the effect of pH on the removal of anionic and cationic dyes. The removal rate (R) reached the maximum value at pH 2.0 and pH 11.0 for the anionic and cationic dyes, respectively.
Fig. 1
The effect of pH and dosage on the removal of dyes by HFC and HFC@CO.
The results indicated that acidic conditions are suitable for the adsorption of anionic dyes but basic conditions are more suitable for cationic dyes. During the removal of dyestuff via adsorption, pH can affect the solubility and site dissociation of the biosorbent in solution, the superficial electrification condition of dyes, and the de-coloration effect of HFC and HFC@CO. The effect of the solution pH on dye uptake could also be explained based on the different zero charge point (Pzcp) values of HFC and HFC@CO. Their Pzcp were 3.1 and 9.0, so at a higher pH, the surface of the HFC particles become negatively charged, facilitating the adsorption of cationic dyes. In contrast, at a lower pH, the surface of the HFC@CO particles may become positively charged (Pzcp = 9.0), allowing greater electrostatic attraction to negatively charged dye anions.Fig. 1b shows maximum removal rates (R) of 2 g L−1, 3 g L−1, 3 g L−1, 3 g L−1, and 2.4 g L−1 for SY, CM, LY, CV, and MG in batch adsorption. Increased dosage can improve the removal rate, but will reduce the equilibrium adsorption capacity (qe). This may be because increased HFC@CO provides more sites for the adsorption of dyestuffs, and thus increases the removal rate. On the other hand, when the initial dye concentration is kept constant and the removal rate improves, there are fewer dye molecules on the biosorbent. Then, when the quantity of biosorbent increases, the relative adsorption rate is reduced and the dye adsorption capacity decreases with increased biosorbent. Therefore, this trade-off should be considered when determining the appropriate amount of adsorbent.
Effect of temperature
This work shows that temperature is a critical factor for the adsorption process. Fig. 2a–e shows the relationship between qe and T for different initial concentrations of cationic and anionic dyes.
Fig. 2
The batch adsorption data under different concentration for (a) CV, (b) MG (c) SY, (d) CM (e) LY (C0 = 50–250 mg L−1, pH = 11, dosage = 2.4 g L−1 or 3 g L−1; n = 3, error < ±3% for cationic dyes by HFC); (C0 = 100–500 mg L−1, pH = 2, dosage = 2 g L−1 or 3 g L−1; n = 3, error < ±3% for anionic dyes by HFC@CO).
As shown in Fig. 2a, qe and R were highest for adsorption of CV by HFC at 20 °C. The max difference value (D-value) of qe between 10 and 50 °C was 5.66–34.68 mg L−1 at concentrations of 50–250 mg L−1. The D-value of qe increased gradually as the concentration of dyes increased and the average R difference was 14.12% for CV. Fig. 2b shows qe and R remained constant for adsorption of MG by HFC at 10–50 °C, and the optimum temperature range was 20–35 °C. Therefore, there is a very small difference of qe and R at different temperatures. Clearly, cationic dyes were adsorbed efficiently at room temperature by raw HFC.The optimal temperature for adsorption of anionic dyes by HFC@CO differed from that seen for the raw material. Fig. 2c–e show that as temperature increased, qe and R decreased at all initial concentrations. The qe and R decreased less at lower concentrations (100–300 mg L−1), suggesting that temperature did not significantly affect adsorption capacity at lower concentrations. However, the D-value of qe increased at concentrations of 400–500 mg L−1. The max D-values were 20.2, 13.4, and 17.9 mg L−1 and the difference of removal rate (D–R) was 8.78, 12.06, and 7.16% for SY, LY, and CM, respectively, for an initial concentration of 500 mg L−1 at 5–15 °C. Additionally, when the temperature reached the reported optimal range (20–50 °C), the D-value and D–R increased. The data presented in Fig. 2c–e also show that qe was reduced by 52.9, 39.3, and 87.3 mg L−1 and R decreased by 21.59, 23.58, and 34.9% for SY, LY, and CM, respectively, at an initial concentration of 500 mg L−1, when the temperature changed from 5 to 50 °C. Overall, these data show that the adsorption process may be exothermic, and the physical binding force between dyestuff molecules and the functional groups (the amino groups) of the biosorbent decreased as the temperature increased.The cationic dyes (raw HFC) and anionic dyes (HFC@CO) can be adsorbed efficiently at room temperature (20 °C) and low temperature (5–10 °C). Thus, HFC and HFC@CO can be used under a wide range of temperatures for the adsorption of cationic and anionic dyes.
Effect of low and high concentration
The data in Fig. 3a and b show the effect of high and low dye concentrations for different contact times using HFC and HFC@CO. As shown in Fig. 3a, the R value increased significantly at 1–30 min for high concentration. The D–R was 20.02 to 34.48% between 1–30 min, and after saturation of the biosorbent, the value of R remained constant after 50 min.
Fig. 3
The batch adsorption data under different concentration for SY, CM, LY, CV and MG (high C0 = 250 and 500 mg L−1, low C0 = 20 mg L−1, pH = 11, dosage = 2.4 g L−1 or 3 g L−1; n = 3, error < ±3% for cationic dyes by HFC); (high C0 = 500 mg L−1, low C0 = 20 mg L−1 pH−1 = 2, dosage = 2 g L−1 or 3 g L−1; n = 3, error < ±3% for anionic dyes by HFC@CO).
The data in Fig. 3b show that the overall change trend was the same at low and high concentrations. The adsorption equilibrium time at low concentration is slightly different from high concentration, with a time point of 30 min. The D–R was in the range of 37.39 to 59.62 mg L−1 within 20 min. Comparison of the data in Fig. 3a and b shows that the upward slope of D–R was bigger at high concentration. This phenomenon means that when the dye concentration is higher, the adsorption equilibrium time will increase accordingly. However, the difference in slope is mainly due to the adsorption rate, because at high concentration, the adsorption rate is very fast due to osmotic pressure, allowing the dye molecules to be highly adsorbed on the biosorbent faster than 1 min. Therefore, the slope of D–R at high concentrations is smaller than that at low concentration. It is important to note that the low slope does not indicate a low adsorption rate, and that the initial adsorption capacity for high concentration is actually higher than at low concentration. Overall, HFC and HFC@CO exhibit excellent adsorption of dyes at high and low concentrations.
Biosorption isotherms
An adsorption isotherm describes how adsorption molecules reach the equilibrium state during the adsorbing process of both liquid- and solid-phases. The adsorption equilibrium equations used here are shown in the ESI†.The parameter values related to Langmuir and Freundlich models are listed in Table 2. As indicated by the R2 values, dye adsorption by HFC and HFC@CO does not fit well to the Freundlich model. Using the Langmuir model, the data shows the highest adsorption capacity with mean R2 values of 0.9903, 0.9831, and 0.9984 for SY, CM, and LY, respectively, at low temperature (5 °C). For CV and MG, the mean R2 values were 0.9997 and 0.9982 at room temperature (20 °C). The qm values were 481.41, 507.23, 141.78, 526.32, and 769.23 mg L−1 for SY, CM, LY, CV, and MG, respectively, at 5 or 20 °C. Overall, the results indicated that the Langmuir model was best qualified to describe the experimental data and that HFC materials showed effective adsorption of dyes, both before and after modification. This suggests that the adsorption process mainly depends on electrostatic attraction and special functional sites, and there was monolayer adsorption onto the HFC and HFC@CO surface.
Isotherm parameters for dyes adsorption on HFC and HFC@COa
Dyes
Parameters
Batch adsorption
Langmuir, the whole concentration range (100–500 mg L−1)
SY
qm (mg g−1)
481.41
b (L mg−1)
10.21
R2
0.9840
CM
qm (mg g−1)
507.23
b (L mg−1)
19.05
R2
0.9625
LY
qm (mg g−1)
141.78
b (L mg−1)
6.24
R2
0.9821
CV
qm (mg g−1)
526.32
b (L mg−1)
0.0039
R2
0.9997
MG
qm (mg g−1)
769.23
b (L mg−1)
0.011
R2
0.9982
Freundlich, the whole concentration range (100–500 mg L−1)
SY
KF (mg g−1) (L mg−1)1/n
38.11
n−1
0.0083
R2
0.9532
CM
KF (mg g−1) (L mg−1)1/n
51.72
n−1
0.4229
R2
0.7333
LY
KF (mg g−1) (L mg−1)1/n
35.18
n−1
0.2803
R2
0.8390
CV
KF (mg g−1) (L mg−1)1/n
1.99
n−1
0.9860
R2
0.9994
MG
KF (mg g−1) (L mg−1)1/n
7.29
n−1
1.142
R2
0.9920
T = 20 °C, pH 11.0, dosage = 2.4 and 3 g L−1 for CV and MG; T = 5 °C, dosage = 2 g L−1 or 3 g L−1 and pH 2.0 for anionic dyes.
T = 20 °C, pH 11.0, dosage = 2.4 and 3 g L−1 for CV and MG; T = 5 °C, dosage = 2 g L−1 or 3 g L−1 and pH 2.0 for anionic dyes.Table 3 compared the maximum adsorption capacity of HFC and HFC@CO with that of with other adsorbents, including some biosorbent materials. Compared with other reported biosorbent material, HFC and HFC@CO showed better adsorption of cationic and anionic dyes. In particular, cationic dyes were efficiently adsorbed onto raw HFC.
Adsorption capacity of cationic and anionic dyes by other adsorbents
Dyes
Adsorbent
Adsorption capacity/(mg g−1)
Concentration/(mg L−1)
Ref.
LY
Activated carbon
90.90
50
Gautam et al. (2015)
Chitin
30.00
25
Dotto et al. (2012)
Polyaniline nano layer composite
30.00
25
Ansari et al. (2011)
Deoiled soya
24.60
50
Mittal et al. (2006)
HFC@CO
141.80
5
This study
SY
Mangrove bark
12.30
30
Seey et al. (2012)
Activated carbon
76.90
25
Ghaedi et al. (2012)
Zn(OH)2 nanoparticles-activated carbon
84.7
25
Ghaedi et al. (2014)
Peanut hull
14.00
50
Gong et al. (2005)
Cu:ZnS-NPs-AC
85.40
25
Agarwal et al. (2016)
HFC@CO
481.40
5
This study
CM
Starch microspheres
16.93
36
Liu et al. (2010)
Crosslinked copolymer
254.30
30
Li et al. (2012)
Modified tilapia fish scales
134.40
25
Zhu et al. (2013)
HFC@CO
507.2
5
This study
CV
Grapefruit peel
249.68
35
Nadeem et al. (2016)
Wheat straw
227.27
20
Gong et al. (2008)
Opal dye sludge
101.13
30
Ma et al. (2012)
Orange peel
14.30
45
Mushtaq et al. (2016)
Rice husk carbon
64.88
25
Mohanty et al. (2006)
Biocomposite (mango stone)
352.79
33
Shoukat et al. (2017)
HFC
526.32
20
This study
MG
CuS-NRs-AC
145.00
25
Sharifpour et al. (2018)
Calcium alginate nanoparticles
277.78
60
Geetha et al. (2015)
Yarrowia lipolytica isf7
155.09
25
Asfaram et al. (2016)
ZnS:Cu-NP-AC
168.06
35
Dastkhoon et al. (2015)
Graphene
153.85
20
Liu et al. (2012)
HFC
769.23
20
This study
Biosorption kinetics
Kinetic models are used to describe the adsorption process and explain the control principles from the perspective of kinetics. According to adsorption kinetics equations (ESI†), we tested pseudo-first order and pseudo-second order kinetic models[37,38] for their fit to the data as a way to study the reaction pathway and rate-controlling step of the adsorption of cationic and anionic dyes by HFC and HFC@CO.The fitted parameters are shown in Table 4. We found that the qe,cal values were all lower than qe,exp, and the R2 values were between 0.7007–0.9899, indicating a poor fit of the experimental data to the pseudo-first-order kinetic model. This poor fit suggests that this model cannot fully describe the complete adsorbing process, but may describe the primary stage of adsorption.[39,40]
Kinetic model parameters for adsorption of anionic dyes by HFC@CO at different initial concentrationa
Dye
C0
Pseudo-first-order kinetics
Pseudo-second-order kinetics
qe,exp (mg g−1)
qe,cal (mg g−1)
k1 (min−1)
R2
qe,cal (mg g−1)
k2 g (mg min)−1
R2
SY
100
2.61
0.0470
0.7007
50.0
1.923
0.9995
49.05
200
2.88
0.0573
0.9899
100.0
1.754
0.9999
99.06
300
4.21
0.0484
0.9636
149.3
0.607
0.9996
147.82
400
6.08
0.0746
0.9841
196.1
0.333
0.9996
193.83
500
6.71
0.0822
0.9373
238.1
0.226
0.9991
230.52
CM
100
2.18
0.1450
0.9760
48.8
9.136
1.0000
49.42
200
4.20
0.0608
0.9064
100.0
0.820
0.9997
98.42
300
5.64
0.0350
0.9766
149.3
0.238
0.9973
146.93
400
6.26
0.0419
0.9722
196.1
0.211
0.9987
193.88
500
5.69
0.0470
0.9706
217.4
0.184
0.9996
221.66
LY
100
2.57
0.2985
0.9424
32.7
13.570
1.0000
32.91
200
3.50
0.0629
0.9096
66.2
1.260
0.9998
65.03
300
4.54
0.0368
0.9103
98.0
0.608
0.9979
95.64
400
4.78
0.0495
0.9674
112.4
0.458
0.9990
109.81
500
4.96
0.0829
0.9876
123.5
0.413
0.9998
123.15
CV
50
3.30
0.259
0.9490
11.21
16.080
0.9999
11.22
100
4.61
0.120
0.8963
22.03
14.515
0.9996
22.44
150
3.80
0.006
0.7112
33.11
4.606
0.9995
33.72
200
5.08
0.090
0.9809
44.84
3.796
0.9997
45.02
250
4.27
0.052
0.8982
56.23
3.047
0.9999
56.15
MG
100
1.04
0.113
0.9484
40.05
2.076
0.9999
39.95
200
1.05
0.037
0.9818
80.01
1.141
0.9998
79.81
300
1.36
0.055
0.9660
119.91
0.201
0.9999
119.84
400
1.67
0.041
0.9660
161.34
0.242
0.9992
160.35
500
1.95
0.051
0.9796
202.85
0.127
0.9986
201.22
T = 20 °C, pH 11, dosage = 2.4 and 3.0 g L−1 for CV and MG; T = 5 °C, dosage = 2 g L−1 or 3 g L−1 and pH 2.0 for anionic dyes.
T = 20 °C, pH 11, dosage = 2.4 and 3.0 g L−1 for CV and MG; T = 5 °C, dosage = 2 g L−1 or 3 g L−1 and pH 2.0 for anionic dyes.The calculated R2 values were closer to 1.000 for the pseudo-second-order kinetic model than for the pseudo-first-order kinetic model. Additionally, the qe,cal showed good agreement with the qe and the R2 values, indicating high correlation. Overall, the pseudo-second-order kinetic model better fit the experimental data.
Adsorption thermodynamics HFC@CO
Thermodynamic parameters include the Gibbs free energy (ΔG0), the enthalpy change (ΔH0), and the entropy change (ΔS0).where R is the universal gas constant (8.314 J (mol K)−1), T is the temperature (K), and Kd is the thermodynamic equilibrium constant.The data presented in Table 5 show negative values of ΔG0 and ΔH0, indicating that the adsorption of anionic dyes is likely a spontaneous exothermic process. Differently, the data presented in Table 6 show a positive value of ΔH0, indicating a spontaneous endothermic process for the adsorption of cationic dyes. These results were consistent with previous conclusions (Section 3.2.1), which showed that qe decreased with increased temperature for anionic dyes and increased with increased temperature i for cationic dyes. In conclusion, the adsorption of anionic dyes by HFC@CO is a spontaneous exothermic process and the adsorption of cationic dyes by HFC is a spontaneous endothermic process.
Thermodynamic parameters for adsorption of anionic dyes by HFC@COa
Dye
ΔH0 (kJ mol−1)
ΔS0 (J mol−1 K−1)
ΔG0 (kJ mol−1)
278 K
283 K
288 K
SY
−62.41
−199.43
−8.05
−6.81
−6.06
CM
−84.96
−282.97
−7.84
−6.02
−5.02
LY
−39.78
−121.34
−6.04
−5.48
−4.82
C
anionic dye = 100, 200, 300, 400 and 500 mg L−1, HFC@CO dosage = 2 g L−1, 3 g L−1, 2 g L−1 and pH 2.0 for SY, LY, CM.
Thermodynamic parameters for adsorption of cationic dyes by HFCa
Dye
ΔH0 (kJ mol−1)
ΔS0 (J mol−1 K−1)
ΔG0 (kJ mol−1)
293 K
308 K
323 K
CV
20.73
72.25
−0.37
−1.28
−2.57
MG
8.12
−6.47
−6.31
−6.03
−6.08
pH 7, CMG = 100, 200, 300, 400 and 500 mg L−1 and HFC dosage = 2.4 g L−1 for MG; pH 11, CV = 50, 100, 150, 200 and 250 mg L−1 and HFC dosage = 3 g L−1 for CV.
C
anionic dye = 100, 200, 300, 400 and 500 mg L−1, HFC@CO dosage = 2 g L−1, 3 g L−1, 2 g L−1 and pH 2.0 for SY, LY, CM.pH 7, CMG = 100, 200, 300, 400 and 500 mg L−1 and HFC dosage = 2.4 g L−1 for MG; pH 11, CV = 50, 100, 150, 200 and 250 mg L−1 and HFC dosage = 3 g L−1 for CV.
Regeneration of exhausted HFC and HFC@CO
Excellent regeneration capability is a crucial requirement for industrial applications to reduce process costs. Fig. 4 shows that cationic and anionic dyes were efficiently removed from the exhausted HFC and HFC@CO biosorbent during batch adsorption. The adsorption rate decreased slightly with increasing regeneration cycles. The result shows that the removal rate remained above 95% for anionic dyes and above 90% for cationic dyes by batch adsorption. Thus, the Huai Flos Chrysanthemum-based material is suitable for the adsorption of dyes and has excellent regeneration capability.
Fig. 4
Regeneration of dyes from HFC and HFC@CO for four adsorption–desorption cycles (T = 20 °C, C0 = 200 mg L−1, pH 11 for anionic dyes; T = 5 °C, C0 = 200 mg L−1, pH 2 for cationic dyes).
Conclusion
Raw HFC and HFC@CO were shown to work as effective biosorbents for the removal of anionic and cationic dyes at different temperatures. The best adsorption occurred at 5 °C and 20 °C, for anionic and cationic dyes, respectively. The equilibrium data were fitted very well to the Langmuir model and a pseudo-second order kinetic model. The thermodynamic parameters indicated that adsorption was a spontaneous exothermic process for anionic dyes and a spontaneous endothermic process for cationic dyes. The excellent performance and regeneration capabilities demonstrate that HFC and HFC@CO are promising biosorbent materials.