Today, there is a significant concern in the industry regarding the disposal of wastewater containing dyes into the environment, so the management and appropriate disposal of these wastes in the environment are considerable. The main aim of this study is to assess the efficiency of activated carbon (AC) prepared from sesame shells to remove direct dyes from aqueous solutions. According to the results, AC prepared from sesame shell had a high specific surface area (525 m/g) and porous structure. The results demonstrated that the adsorbent had high potential to remove direct dyes as 84.5% of direct brown 103 (DB103), 93.08% of direct red 80 (DR80), 93.37% of direct blue 21 (DB21) and 98.39% of direct blue 199 (DB199) under the optimal conditions of adsorbent dose 4.8 g/L, contact time 19 min, pH 3 and initial dye concentration 12 mg/L. The experimental results showed that kinetic data were best described by the pseudo-second-order model (R = 0.989) while isotherm data were best fitted by the Freundlich model (R = 0.994). In the present study, not only was the produced waste used as a useful and economically valuable material, but it was also applied as an effective adsorbent to remove direct dyes from industrial effluents and reduce environmental pollution.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11496657PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-76081-xDOI Listing

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