4.5 Article

Prediction of methyl orange dye (MO) adsorption using activated carbon with an artificial neural network optimization modeling

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e12888

Keywords

Activated carbon; Adsorption capacity; Artificial neural network; Date stones; Methyl orange; Regression

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In this study, the removal of methyl orange dye by activated carbon made from date seeds was modeled using an artificial neural network technique. Physicochemical parameters of the adsorbent were assessed through instrumental investigations. The results showed that the dye removal process can be predicted using an ANN technique, and adsorption onto activated carbon may be employed as a main treatment for dye removal from wastewater.
In this study, methyl orange (MO) dye removal by adsorption utilizing activated carbon made from date seeds (DPAC) was modeled using an artificial neural network (ANN) technique. Instrumental investigations such as X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) analysis were used to assess the physicochemical parameters of adsorbent. By changing operational parameters including adsorbent dosage (0.01-0.03 g), solution pH 3-8, initial dye concentration (5-20 mg/L), and contact time (2-60 min), the viability of date seeds for the adsorptive removal of methyl orange dye from aqueous solution was assessed in a batch procedure. The system followed the pseudo 2nd order kinetic model for DPAC adsorbent, according to the kinetic study (R2 = 0.9973). The mean square error (MSE), relative root mean square error (RRMSE), root mean square error (RMSE), mean absolute percentage error (MAPE), relative error (RE), and correlation coefficient (R2) were used to measure the ANN model performance. The maximum RE was 8.24% for the ANN model. Two isotherm models, Langmuir and Freundlich, were studied to fit the equilibrium data. Compared with the Freundlich isotherm model (R2 = 0.72), the Langmuir model functioned better as an adsorption isotherm with R2 of 0.9902.Thus, this study demonstrates that the dye removal process can be predicted using an ANN technique, and it also suggests that adsorption onto DPAC may be employed as a main treatment for dye removal from wastewater.

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