Adsorptive removal of crude petroleum oil from water using floating pinewood biochar decorated with coconut oil-derived fatty acids

The present investigation deals with the adsorptive removal of crude petroleum oil from the water surface using coconut oil-modified pinewood biochar. Biochar generated at higher pyrolysis temperature (700 °C) revealed higher fatty acid-binding efficiency responsible for the excellent hydrophobicity...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2021-08, Vol.781, p.146636-146636, Article 146636
Hauptverfasser: Gurav, Ranjit, Bhatia, Shashi Kant, Choi, Tae-Rim, Choi, Yong-Keun, Kim, Hyun Joong, Song, Hun-Suk, Park, Sol Lee, Lee, Hye Soo, Lee, Sun Mi, Choi, Kwon-Young, Yang, Yung-Hun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The present investigation deals with the adsorptive removal of crude petroleum oil from the water surface using coconut oil-modified pinewood biochar. Biochar generated at higher pyrolysis temperature (700 °C) revealed higher fatty acid-binding efficiency responsible for the excellent hydrophobicity of the biochar. Fatty acids composition attached to the biochar produced at 700 °C was (mg g−1 BC) lauric acid (9.024), myristic acid (5.065), palmitic acid (2.769), capric acid (1.639), oleic acid (1.362), stearic acid (1.114), and linoleic acid (0.130). Simulation of the experimental adsorption data of pristine and modified pinewood biochar generated at 700 °C offered the best fit to pseudo-first-order kinetics (R2 > 0.97) and Langmuir isotherm model (R2 > 0.99) based on the highest regression coefficients. Consequently, the adsorption process was mainly driven by surface hydrophobic interactions including π-π electron-donor-acceptor between electron-rich (π-donor) polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from the crude oil and biochar (π-acceptor). A maximum adsorption capacity (Qmax) of 5.315 g g−1 was achieved by modified floating biochar within 60 min. Whereas the reusability testing revealed 49.39% and 51.40% was the adsorption efficiency of pristine and modified biochar at the fifth adsorption-desorption cycle. [Display omitted] •Hydrophobicity of the pinewood biochar was enhanced using coconut oil•Modified biochar(700 °C) demonstrated higher crude petroleum oil adsorption capacity•Pseudo-first order and Langmuir were the best-suited adsorption models•Sorption capacity remained about 50% at the fifth adsorption-desorption cycle•Crude petroleum oil spill clean-up from the water surface using floating biochar
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146636