Herein, the sustainable fabrication of magnetic iron oxide nanoadsorbent prepared with activated carbon of inedible Cynometra ramiflora fruit has been investigated. Activated carbon was obtained from phosphoric acid-treated C. ramiflora fruit, which was then utilized for the synthesis of magnetic nanocomposite (CRAC@FeO). The formed nanocomposite was a porous irregular dense matrix of amorphous evenly sized spherical nanoparticles, as visualized by FESEM, and also contained carbon, oxygen, iron, and phosphorous in its elemental composition. FT-IR spectrum depicted characteristic bands attributing to Fe-O, C-OH, C-N, CC, and -OH bonds. VSM and XRD results proved that CRAC@FeO was superparamagnetic with a moderate degree of crystallinity and high saturation magnetization value (1.66 emu/g). Superior surface area, pore size, and pore volume of 766.75 m/g, 2.11 nm, and 0.4050 cm/g respectively were measured on BET analysis of CRAC@FeO nanocomposite, indicating their suitability for use as an adsorbent. On application of this nanocomposite for adsorption of tetracycline, maximum removal of 95.78% of 50 ppm TC at pH 4, CRAC@FeO 0.4 g/L in 240 min. The adsorption of TC by CRAC@FeO was confirmed as monolayer sorption by ionic interaction (R = 0.9999) as it followed pseudo-second-order kinetics and Langmuir isotherm (R = 0.9801). CRAC@FeO showed a maximum adsorption capacity of 312.5 mg/g towards TC antibiotics indicating its potential for the treatment of antibiotic-contaminated samples. Since negative ΔG and positive ΔH and ΔS values were obtained at all tested temperatures during the thermodynamic studies, the adsorption was confirmed to be endothermic, spontaneous, and feasible with an enhanced degree of randomness.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.136892 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!