4.7 Article

Photocatalytic activity of calcined chicken eggshells for Safranin and Reactive Red 180 decolorization

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 304, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.135210

Keywords

Waste chicken eggshells; Photocatalysis; Sintering temperature; Dyes removal; Cationic and anionic dyes

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One of the most important environmental issues today is the inadequate treatment of wastewater containing dyes. Photocatalytic based wastewater treatment processes have gained attention as a new, economically viable, and promising approach. This study investigated the photocatalytic activity of eggshell-CaO produced from waste chicken eggshells for decolorization of Safranin and Reactive Red 180 dyes.
One of the most important problems affecting the environment today is the inability to adequately treat wastewater containing dyes. Among of the many treatment processes used in the treatment of dye-containing wastewater, photocatalytic based wastewater treatment processes attract the attention of scientists as a new, economically feasible, and promising approach which has been in practice for a few decades. However, in order to use these processes in wider areas, cheap and effective catalysts are still being developed today. In this study, the photocatalytic activity of eggshell-CaO produced from waste chicken eggshells was investigated for decolorization of Safranin (Basic Red 2) and Reactive Red 180 (RR180) dyes. First, sintering process was applied to the waste chicken eggshells at different temperatures (300, 600, 900 degrees C) in order to observe CaO formation from the eggshells. Second, the parameters such as photocatalyst amount, pH, concentration of dyes, and reaction time were optimized on dye removal efficiency in photocatalytic experiments. The optimum conditions were performed under visible light and found to be 1 g/L of catalyst amount (sintered at 900 degrees C), original solution pH (6.80 for Safranin and 6.60 for RR180), and 5 mg/L of dye concentration. The photocatalytic removal efficiencies of Safranin and RR180 dyes were 100% and 97.90%, respectively, under the determined optimum experimental conditions. The adsorption efficiency of the dyes that could be realized during the photocatalytic experiment was measured as 20.99% and 9.99% for Safranin and RR180 dyes, respectively.

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