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Removal of heavy metals from wastewater using low-cost biochar prepared from jackfruit seed waste

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 20:35 authored by Mohammed Khadem, Abid Ibrahim, Imran Mokashi, Nazia Hossain
The present study focuses on using jackfruit seed waste (JSW) for bioremediation of heavy toxic metals from water. The fruit is abundantly grown in India and Far East countries and produces myriad tons of seeds. A simple procedure is developed in the laboratory by thermally activating JSW by orthophosphoric acid at 500 °C. Surface morphology, porosity, and structural analyses of the resultant biochar were conducted. The activated biochar was applied for batch adsorption of several heavy metal ions: Fe(III), Cd(II), Cu(II), Pb(II), and Mn(VII) at pH 7. The average heavy metal uptake by activated JSW biochar is 76.4 mg g−1, 79.4 mg g−1, 97.9 mg g−1, 79.9 mg g−1, and 79.8 mg g−1 for Fe(III), Pb(II), Cu(II), Cd(II), and Mn(VII), respectively. The experimental conditions were optimized to remove heavy metals at neutral pH. The adsorption process was exothermic, and Langmuir and pseudo-second-order kinetic study models were best fitted. The observation was in close agreement with the experimental data. Thermal and structural characterization of biochar at post-adsorption analyses was conducted. The study has distinguished features of simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and viability compared to many of the literature-reported biomass waste. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

History

Journal

Biomass Conversion and Biorefinery

Volume

13

Start page

14447

End page

14456

Total pages

10

Publisher

Springer

Place published

Germany

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2022

Former Identifier

2006116138

Esploro creation date

2023-11-15

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