Kinetics, Thermodynamics, and Mechanistic Studies of Arsenic Removal Utilizing Natural Soil as Adsorbent

The contamination of water sources with the heavy metal contaminant arsenic (As) causes substantial risks to humans, animals, and other living organisms. Therefore, the introduction of methods for the removal of As is important. The present study aimed to investigate the adsorption model and mechani...

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Veröffentlicht in:Langmuir 2024-09, Vol.40 (38), p.20101-20112
Hauptverfasser: Mohd Fairuz, Farah Shahirah, Md Muslim, Noor Zuhartini, Wan Abdullah, Wan Nazwanie, Mohd Shohaimi, Norshahidatul Akmar, Abdullah, Nor Hakimin, Ab Halim, Ahmad Zamani, Mohd Shukri, Nurasmat, Muhamad Salleh, Nur Fatien
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container_end_page 20112
container_issue 38
container_start_page 20101
container_title Langmuir
container_volume 40
creator Mohd Fairuz, Farah Shahirah
Md Muslim, Noor Zuhartini
Wan Abdullah, Wan Nazwanie
Mohd Shohaimi, Norshahidatul Akmar
Abdullah, Nor Hakimin
Ab Halim, Ahmad Zamani
Mohd Shukri, Nurasmat
Muhamad Salleh, Nur Fatien
description The contamination of water sources with the heavy metal contaminant arsenic (As) causes substantial risks to humans, animals, and other living organisms. Therefore, the introduction of methods for the removal of As is important. The present study aimed to investigate the adsorption model and mechanism of As removal utilizing natural soil adsorbents. The batch adsorption technique was used to analyze the impacts of various parameters such as contact time, initial As concentration, pH, and temperature. Adsorption mechanisms were studied through adsorption kinetic, isotherm, and thermodynamic models. The batch adsorption study findings indicate that the optimal conditions for maximum As removal were achieved by application of 2.2 g of adsorbents in 50 μg/L of As solution for 60 min of contact time at a pH of 5.5 ± 0.5 and a temperature of 40 °C. The highest removal efficiency was achieved when red soil was employed as the adsorbent. The kinetic, isotherm, and thermodynamic models revealed that As adsorption was a chemisorptive, nonspontaneous, and endothermic process.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acs.langmuir.4c02309
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title Kinetics, Thermodynamics, and Mechanistic Studies of Arsenic Removal Utilizing Natural Soil as Adsorbent
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