Accidental diesel spills can occur in marine environments such as harbors, leading to adverse effects on the environmental compartment and humans. This study proposes the surgical mask as an affordable and sustainable adsorbent for the remediation of diesel-contaminated seawater to cope with the polymeric waste generated monthly in hospital facilities. This approach can also be helpful considering a possible future pandemic, alleviating the pressure on the waste management system by avoiding improper mask incineration and landfilling, as instead occurred during the previous COVID-19. Batch adsorption-desorption experiments revealed a complete diesel removal from seawater after 120 min with the intact laceless mask, which showed an adsorption capacity of up to 3.43 g/g. The adsorption curve was better predicted via Weber and Morris's kinetic (R = 0.876) and, in general, with Temkin isotherm (R = 0.965-0.996) probably due to the occurrence of chemisorption with intraparticle diffusion as one of the rates-determining steps. A hysteresis index of 0.23-0.36 was obtained from the desorption isotherms, suggesting that diesel adsorption onto surgical masks was faster than the desorption mechanism. Also, the effect of pH, ionic strength and temperature on diesel adsorption was examined. The results from the reusability tests indicated that the surgical mask can be regenerated for 5 consecutive cycles while decreasing the adsorption capacity by only approximately 11%.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120529 | DOI Listing |
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