Hydrogen Peroxide Treated Desiccated Coconut Waste as a Biosorbent in Malachite Green Removal from Aqueous Solutions

Malachite green (MG), commonly employed in the textile and dyeing sectors, is a prevalent and enduring contaminant found in wastewater and the environment. Its presence poses harmful effects to humans and aquatic organisms. This work utilised hydrogen peroxide-treated desiccated coconut waste (HPDCW...

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Published in:JOURNAL OF ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING
Main Authors: Hussin, Shuhaila Mohd; Al-Amrani, Waheeba Ahmed; Suah, Faiz Bukhari Mohd; Harimu, La; Hanafiah, Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: POLISH SOC ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING-PTIE 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001156162500003
author Hussin
Shuhaila Mohd; Al-Amrani
Waheeba Ahmed; Suah
Faiz Bukhari Mohd; Harimu
La; Hanafiah
Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat
spellingShingle Hussin
Shuhaila Mohd; Al-Amrani
Waheeba Ahmed; Suah
Faiz Bukhari Mohd; Harimu
La; Hanafiah
Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat
Hydrogen Peroxide Treated Desiccated Coconut Waste as a Biosorbent in Malachite Green Removal from Aqueous Solutions
Engineering
author_facet Hussin
Shuhaila Mohd; Al-Amrani
Waheeba Ahmed; Suah
Faiz Bukhari Mohd; Harimu
La; Hanafiah
Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat
author_sort Hussin
spelling Hussin, Shuhaila Mohd; Al-Amrani, Waheeba Ahmed; Suah, Faiz Bukhari Mohd; Harimu, La; Hanafiah, Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat
Hydrogen Peroxide Treated Desiccated Coconut Waste as a Biosorbent in Malachite Green Removal from Aqueous Solutions
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING
English
Article
Malachite green (MG), commonly employed in the textile and dyeing sectors, is a prevalent and enduring contaminant found in wastewater and the environment. Its presence poses harmful effects to humans and aquatic organisms. This work utilised hydrogen peroxide-treated desiccated coconut waste (HPDCW) to remove MG from an aqueous solution. The HPDCW underwent characterisation utilising FTIR, SEM-EDX, pHslurry, and pHpzc.Based on the results obtained, it was found that HPDCW recorded a biosorption capacity of 211.88 mg/g, attained at a temperature of 302 K, a pH of 9, a contact period of 5 min, and a dosage of 0.02 g. MG biosorption rates accurately followed the pseudo-second-order kinetic model, while the equilibrium data presented a step-shaped isotherm model. The relatively small percentages of MG desorption observed when using distilled water and HCl (0.01 and 0.02 M) indicate that electrostatic interaction is one of the mechanisms responsible for the interaction between MG and HPDCW. There is also a possibility of the involvement of hydrogen bonding and pi-pi interactions.
POLISH SOC ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING-PTIE
2299-8993

2024
25
3
10.12911/22998993/182870
Engineering
hybrid
WOS:001156162500003
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001156162500003
title Hydrogen Peroxide Treated Desiccated Coconut Waste as a Biosorbent in Malachite Green Removal from Aqueous Solutions
title_short Hydrogen Peroxide Treated Desiccated Coconut Waste as a Biosorbent in Malachite Green Removal from Aqueous Solutions
title_full Hydrogen Peroxide Treated Desiccated Coconut Waste as a Biosorbent in Malachite Green Removal from Aqueous Solutions
title_fullStr Hydrogen Peroxide Treated Desiccated Coconut Waste as a Biosorbent in Malachite Green Removal from Aqueous Solutions
title_full_unstemmed Hydrogen Peroxide Treated Desiccated Coconut Waste as a Biosorbent in Malachite Green Removal from Aqueous Solutions
title_sort Hydrogen Peroxide Treated Desiccated Coconut Waste as a Biosorbent in Malachite Green Removal from Aqueous Solutions
container_title JOURNAL OF ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING
language English
format Article
description Malachite green (MG), commonly employed in the textile and dyeing sectors, is a prevalent and enduring contaminant found in wastewater and the environment. Its presence poses harmful effects to humans and aquatic organisms. This work utilised hydrogen peroxide-treated desiccated coconut waste (HPDCW) to remove MG from an aqueous solution. The HPDCW underwent characterisation utilising FTIR, SEM-EDX, pHslurry, and pHpzc.Based on the results obtained, it was found that HPDCW recorded a biosorption capacity of 211.88 mg/g, attained at a temperature of 302 K, a pH of 9, a contact period of 5 min, and a dosage of 0.02 g. MG biosorption rates accurately followed the pseudo-second-order kinetic model, while the equilibrium data presented a step-shaped isotherm model. The relatively small percentages of MG desorption observed when using distilled water and HCl (0.01 and 0.02 M) indicate that electrostatic interaction is one of the mechanisms responsible for the interaction between MG and HPDCW. There is also a possibility of the involvement of hydrogen bonding and pi-pi interactions.
publisher POLISH SOC ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING-PTIE
issn 2299-8993

publishDate 2024
container_volume 25
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.12911/22998993/182870
topic Engineering
topic_facet Engineering
accesstype hybrid
id WOS:001156162500003
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001156162500003
record_format wos
collection Web of Science (WoS)
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