Desorption of chloramphenicol from ordered mesoporous carbon-alginate beads: Effects of operating parameters, and isotherm, kinetics, and regeneration studies
View/ Open
Publisher version (Check access options)
Check access options
Date
2021Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study has investigated the desorption of an emerging contaminant, known as chloramphenicol (CPC), from ordered mesoporous carbon (OMC)-alginate beads. The effects of initial concentration, operating temperature, and a selection of eluents (water, ethanol, and sodium chloride (NaCl)) on the whole desorption process were analysed. The desorption efficiency was found to decrease with increasing temperature, an indication for a favourable desorption process at a lower temperature range. NaCl was the most effective eluent for the CPC desorption process, followed by ethanol and water. The use of 1 M NaCl has resulted in the highest desorption efficiency of 84.7%. Redlich-Peterson and Freundlich isotherm models fitted well to the CPC desorption experimental data. The desorption kinetic data for ethanol and NaCl as eluents fitted well to the pseudo-second order kinetic model. Meanwhile, distilled water as an eluent was best fitted to the pseudo-first order kinetic model. The CPC adsorption efficiency began to notably decrease from 78.9% to 48.5% after five consecutive adsorption/desorption cycles. Similarly, the desorption efficiency began to decrease from 76.0% in the first cycle down to 35.2% in the fifth cycle. These findings demonstrated that the OMC-alginate beads are a very promising adsorbent with excellent desorption and reusability characteristics towards the targeted antibiotic, CPC.
Collections
- Chemical Engineering [1174 items ]