Synthesis and characterizations of conocarpus- and azadirachta-derived activated carbons as wastewater recycling material

Water being the most important fluid supporting the life as well as industry is getting sparse and polluted day by day. Activated carbon (AC) can be utilized in various applications of significant environmental impact and sustainable living such as carbon dioxide sensing and capturing, air purificat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental monitoring and assessment 2024-03, Vol.196 (3), p.262-262, Article 262
Hauptverfasser: Mehdi, Murtuza, Baig, Mirza Hammad, Ahmad, Masood, Ali, Kamran, Mohib, Muhammad, Farooqi, Ali, Affan, Mohammad, Mazin, Muhammad
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 262
container_title Environmental monitoring and assessment
container_volume 196
creator Mehdi, Murtuza
Baig, Mirza Hammad
Ahmad, Masood
Ali, Kamran
Mohib, Muhammad
Farooqi, Ali
Affan, Mohammad
Mazin, Muhammad
description Water being the most important fluid supporting the life as well as industry is getting sparse and polluted day by day. Activated carbon (AC) can be utilized in various applications of significant environmental impact and sustainable living such as carbon dioxide sensing and capturing, air purification, and water recycling. However, in the wake of the recent corona pandemic which resulted in global lockdown and took the entire world by shock, a cost-effective and simple synthesis of such a useful material remains dire need of time. Therefore, this paper describes a simple and cost-effective synthesis of activated carbon (AC) of high porosity and surface area derived from the pruning of conocarpus and azadirachta trees. In reference to the study under consideration, alongside numerous others, a furnace was employed to synthesize activated carbon. However, our approach utilized a more conventional methodology wherein the environmental parameters were not optimized. In furnace-based procedures, factors such as temperature, pressure, and humidity are meticulously regulated, contrasting with the conventional methodologies where such parameters lack optimal control. Consequently, employing a furnace does not constitute a cost-effective approach for the physical activation of organic samples thus proving a furnace is not imperative for physical activation. The synthesis was carried out by physical activation in the form of carbonization followed by chemical activation with potassium hydroxide (KOH). The influence of activated carbon from each pruning over filtration of water containing industrial dye was investigated. Activation temperature and impregnation ratio of 600–800 °C and 1:5 were selected respectively. X-ray diffraction patterns (XRD) for all AC samples indicted the appearance of broad peaks at 2 θ value of 20–30° which confirms the presence of carbon in the sample. The physical morphology arrangement by SEM analysis showed uneven arrangement of pores of conocarpus which indicated higher iodine number and hence higher adsorption capacity of 442.13 mg/g.
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Activated carbon (AC) can be utilized in various applications of significant environmental impact and sustainable living such as carbon dioxide sensing and capturing, air purification, and water recycling. However, in the wake of the recent corona pandemic which resulted in global lockdown and took the entire world by shock, a cost-effective and simple synthesis of such a useful material remains dire need of time. Therefore, this paper describes a simple and cost-effective synthesis of activated carbon (AC) of high porosity and surface area derived from the pruning of conocarpus and azadirachta trees. In reference to the study under consideration, alongside numerous others, a furnace was employed to synthesize activated carbon. However, our approach utilized a more conventional methodology wherein the environmental parameters were not optimized. In furnace-based procedures, factors such as temperature, pressure, and humidity are meticulously regulated, contrasting with the conventional methodologies where such parameters lack optimal control. Consequently, employing a furnace does not constitute a cost-effective approach for the physical activation of organic samples thus proving a furnace is not imperative for physical activation. The synthesis was carried out by physical activation in the form of carbonization followed by chemical activation with potassium hydroxide (KOH). The influence of activated carbon from each pruning over filtration of water containing industrial dye was investigated. Activation temperature and impregnation ratio of 600–800 °C and 1:5 were selected respectively. X-ray diffraction patterns (XRD) for all AC samples indicted the appearance of broad peaks at 2 θ value of 20–30° which confirms the presence of carbon in the sample. The physical morphology arrangement by SEM analysis showed uneven arrangement of pores of conocarpus which indicated higher iodine number and hence higher adsorption capacity of 442.13 mg/g.</abstract><cop>Cham</cop><pub>Springer International Publishing</pub><pmid>38351411</pmid><doi>10.1007/s10661-024-12423-6</doi><tpages>1</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Activated carbon
Adsorption
air
Air purification
Atmospheric Protection/Air Quality Control/Air Pollution
Azadirachta
Carbon
Carbon dioxide
carbonization
Charcoal - chemistry
Conocarpus
Corona
cost effectiveness
Diffraction patterns
Dyes
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecology
Ecotoxicology
Environment
Environmental factors
Environmental impact
Environmental Management
Environmental Monitoring
Environmental parameters
filtration
furnaces
humidity
Hydroxides
industry
Iodine
iodine value
Methods
Monitoring/Environmental Analysis
Optimal control
pandemic
Parameters
Porosity
Potassium
Potassium Compounds
Potassium hydroxide
Potassium hydroxides
Pruning
Recycling
surface area
Synthesis
temperature
Wastewater
Wastewater treatment
Water
Water Pollutants, Chemical - chemistry
Water purification
Water reuse
X-ray diffraction
title Synthesis and characterizations of conocarpus- and azadirachta-derived activated carbons as wastewater recycling material
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