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Recycling waste macadamia nut shells as a low hydrothermally engineered activated carbon for the efficient removal of a RIT navy blue textile dye from aqueous solutions
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Recycling waste macadamia nut shells as a low hydrothermally engineered activated carbon for the efficient removal of a RIT navy blue textile dye from aqueous solutions

A. F. M. Fahad Halim, Gerrard Eddy Jai Poinern, Derek Fawcett, Peter Chapman, Yuanyuan Feng and Nikolay Anguelov
Materials research express, Vol.11(11), 115601
2024
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CC BY V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

Materials Science Materials Science, Multidisciplinary Science & Technology Technology
Significant concentrations of toxic dyes present in textile manufacturing effluents are discharged into natural water bodies ( lake and rivers) every day and results in the pollution of aquatic ecosystems. New and cost-effective sustainable water treatment strategies are urgently needed to tackle this global issue. The present study investigates the feasibility of using activated carbon produced from macadamia nutshells, a major agricultural waste product, to remove a commercially available textile RIT navy blue dye from aqueous solutions. This activated carbon was synthesized using a low-temperature hydrothermal ( LTH ) method that used H2SO4 as the activating agent. The textural and chemical properties of the engineered activated carbon were investigated by nitrogen adsorption-desorption measurements, XRD, SEM, TGA, Raman, and FT-IR spectroscopy. The activated carbon ( MAC ) had a micro-porous structure with a BET surface area of 478 m(2) g(-1 )for the MAC 10 sample. The linear pseudo-first order model described the kinetics of the adsorption process. The Langmuir model was found to be the most proper model for describing the adsorption isotherm data and revealed the activated carbon absorbent had a theoretical adsorption capacity of 57.8 mg g(-1). The study found the activated carbon has the potential to remove toxic dyes from wastewater, reduce agricultural waste, and this addresses the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#6 Clean Water and Sanitation
#9 Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure
#12 Responsible Consumption & Production

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
2 Chemistry
2.90 Water Treatment
2.90.27 Adsorption
Web Of Science research areas
Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
ESI research areas
Materials Science
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