4.5 Article

Adsorptive removal of oxytetracycline using MnO2-engineered pine-cone biochar: thermodynamic and kinetic investigation and process optimization

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume 195, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-023-11932-0

Keywords

Adsorption; Manganese oxide biochar composite; Kinetics; Isotherm; Thermodynamics; Oxytetracycline

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This study reports the adsorptive removal of oxytetracycline from water using a newly developed MnO2/PCBC adsorbent. The results show that MnO2/PCBC has high adsorption capacity and can be effectively reused for multiple cycles. This research contributes to the development of a cost-effective technique for antibiotic removal from water.
Indiscriminate use of oxytetracycline is linked to the development of antibiotic-resistant genes, posing a serious threat to human health and ecosystem balance. This article reports the adsorptive elimination of oxytetracycline (OTC) from aqueous solution using a newly developed MnO2-modified pine-cone biochar (MnO2/PCBC). The MnO2/PCBC was characterized using X-ray diffraction, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, CHNS analyzer, inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy, and Brunauer-Emmett-Teller N-2 adsorption analyzer. Batch adsorption experiments, designed using the central composite design framework of response surface methodology, were conducted to investigate the influence of process variables on the adsorption of OTC onto MnO2/PCBC. The optimized conditions for achieving maximum removal (88.1%) were found to be at pH 8, MnO2/PCBC dose 0.44 g/L, initial OTC concentration 200 mg/L, and temperature 303 K. The adsorption process follows Langmuir (R-2=0.95) and Freundlich (R-2=0.95) isotherms and pseudo-second-order (R-2=0.99) adsorption kinetics. The adsorption process was found to be endothermic (Delta H0 = 33.04 kJ/mol) and spontaneous in nature (Delta G0 from -1.33 kJ/mol at 283 K to -5.65 kJ/mol at 313 K). The synthesized MnO2/PCBC could be recycled and reused for OTC removal with a percentage removal of around 80% after fifth cycle. The results indicate an effective removal of oxytetracycline with only 0.44 g/L MnO2/PCBC with maximum adsorption capacity of 357.14 mg/g which demonstrates improved performance in comparison to many adsorbents reported in literature. This implies that MnO2/PCBC offers potential to be developed into a cost-effective technique for antibiotic removal from water.

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