4.3 Article

Effective adsorption of Fuchsine dye on FeZnOAC: kinetic, isotherm, double-layer modelling and reusability study

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Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/03067319.2021.1917559

Keywords

FeZnOAC; adsorption; pseudo-second-order model; Langmuir isotherm; statistical physics model

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FeZnOAC was successfully synthesized as an adsorbent for the removal of Fuchsine dye, showing efficient performance and high adsorption capacity. The adsorption behavior followed a pseudo-second-order model and the Langmuir isothermal model, with adsorption capacity dependent on temperature and system nature. FeZnOAC proves to be a potential adsorbent for Fuchsine dye removal from industrial wastewater and can be regenerated for multiple uses.
The FeZnO (iron zinc bimetallic oxide) was synthesised using the ultrasound-assisted method and further converted into FeZnOAC (iron zinc bimetallic oxide-doped activated carbon) by treating it with activated carbon. As developed FeZnOAC is effectively used for the adsorption of Fuchsine dye from an aqueous dye solution. A 200 mg of FeZnOAC was sufficient for the rapid removal of Fuchsine (>97.64%) dye. The kinetic adsorption data is well fitted with a pseudo-second-order model. The Langmuir isothermal model shows a high regression coefficient (R-2) than the Freundlich with a Q(max) of 333.33 mg g(-1). The dye adsorption at varying temperatures (i.e. 298-318 K) was based on a multi-layered statistical physics model. The n value (n < 0.5) obtained from the model indicates that the Fuchsine dye adsorbed on the surface of FeZnOAC is parallel adsorption. It shows that the dye molecules' adsorptive orientations are dependent on the temperature and nature of the system. The FeZnOAC is proven to be a potential adsorbent for the removal of Fuchsine due to the availability of more adsorption sites. Interestingly, FeZnOAC is used for regeneration studies up to five cycles with a maximum adsorption capacity of 97.4%. The as-synthesised FeZnOAC has been successfully applied to remove Fuchsine dye from industrial wastewater, resulting in an alternative candidate for commercialisation.

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