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AuthorEl-Shafie, Ahmed S.
AuthorKhaled, Rehab Khaled
AuthorAhsan, Insharah
AuthorHamdi, Helmi
AuthorShibl, Mohamed F.
AuthorEl-Azazy, Marwa
Available date2025-10-09T05:52:35Z
Publication Date2024
Publication NameApplied Water Science
ResourceScopus
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13201-024-02238-8
ISSN21905487
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/67829
AbstractAntibiotics are among the most widely used pharmaceutically active compounds. Possessing the capability to adversely impact the ecological system, existence of antibiotics in the environment is an escalating concern. With the purpose of removing two widely used antibiotics efficiently from aqueous solutions, the competency of two biochar (BC)-based sorbents derived from spent coffee (SC) grounds was investigated. Both pristine (SCBC) and nickel (II) oxide-impregnated (Ni-SCBC) biochars were utilized as sustainable and cost-effective sorbents to remove daunorubicin (DAYN) and tigecycline (TIGY) from single synthetic aqueous solutions and binary combinations. Batch adsorption experiments were controlled implementing Box-Behnken design. The removal efficiency of Ni-SCBC was superior compared to SCBC (TIGY: 67.06%, DAYN: 94.30%). Results of characterizations showed that impregnation with NiO changed the degree of crystallization with a remarkable increase in the surface area from 49.23 m2/g in SCBC to 86.06 m2/g in Ni-SCBC. Adsorption of DAYN and TIGY (single solutions) conformed well to Freundlich, and Langmuir isotherms, respectively. A maximum adsorption capacity (qmax) of 136.62 mg/g (DAYN) and 73.15 mg/g (TIGY) was reported in single solutions, compared to 23.50 mg/g (DAYN) and 58.42 mg/g (TIGY) in binary mixture. Adsorption kinetics onto Ni-SCBC fitted well with the pseudo-second-order (PSO) and Elovich models. Acquired results demonstrated that SCBC and Ni-SCBC are promising adsorbents for remedying antibiotics.
SponsorThis research was funded by Qatar University\u2014Internal Student Grant \u2018QUST-1-CAS-2022\u2013338.\u2019 All findings reported herein are the responsibility of the authors.
Languageen
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
SubjectBox-Behnken design
Composite desirability function
Metal oxide-decorated biochar
Partially overlapped spectra
Pharmaceutical pollutants
TitleRemoval of antibiotics from aqueous solutions: insights of competitive adsorption onto Ni-impregnated biochar of spent coffee grounds
TypeArticle
Issue Number9
Volume Number14
ESSN21905495
dc.accessType Open Access


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