Gbekeloluwa B Oguntimein
Morgan State University, USA
Title: Title: dye biosorption onto dried alkali treated sunflower seed hull: Isotherms, kinetics, thermodynamic studies and batch adsorber design
Biography
Biography: Gbekeloluwa B Oguntimein
Abstract
Dyes containing effluents from textile and food industries cause serious environmental problems that can be mutagenic or carcinogenic and require pretreatment for color removal prior to disposal into aqueous systems. Treatment Technologies like coagulation and flocculation reverse osmosis, photo degradation membrane separation, biodegradation, ion exchange, and adsorption are most often used for the treatment of dye containing wastewater. Among these methods adsorption is simple and requires low maintenance and is the most widely used single method for the removal of dyes from aqueous solutions and effluent. This paper addresses the application of alkali treated dried sunflower seed hull (DSSH), a low cost material, for the removal of textile dye from industrial wastewater effluent. Batch adsorption studies were performed as a function of contact time, initial solution pH, initial dye concentration and temperature. The optimum initial solution pH was found to be pH 2.2. Kinetic analysis revealed that adsorption experimental data was best fitted by pseudo-second order model at all textile dye concentration tested. Based on the rate constants obtained by this kinetic model using Arrhenius and Eyring equations, the activation parameters were determined, namely the activation energy (8.79 kJ/ mol), the change of entropy (-1.73 x 108 k J/ mol/ K), enthalpy (-6.20 kJ/ mol), and Gibbs free energy (range 5.06 x 1010–5.77 x 1010 kJ/ mol) for the formation of activated complex between Textile dye molecules and dried sunflower seed hull. The equilibrium adsorption data was found to follow the Langmuir isotherm model and maximum monolayer capacity was found to be 169.5mg g_1 at 25o C. The Langmuir isotherm model was applied to the design of a single –stage absorber. Thermodynamics of dye adsorption revealed the process was spontaneous and exothermic in nature. The magnitude of enthalpy change (ΔH) was found to be 8.79 kJ/mol, indicating that physical forces were involved in adsorption of dye onto DSSH. This study revealed that DSSH a waste material may be a suitable adsorbent for decolorization of industrial effluents due to its low cost and high adsorption capacity.