4.6 Article

NaOH-Activated Natural Glauconite for Low-Cost Adsorption of Congo Red Dye

Journal

WATER
Volume 15, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w15213753

Keywords

natural glauconite; NaOH; adsorption; Congo Red Dye; kinetics; isotherms

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This study explored the adsorption of Congo red dye from textile effluent using natural clay glauconite as a sustainable and inexpensive adsorbent. The effects of varying concentrations of sodium hydroxide on glauconite alteration were examined, and the optimal NaOH concentration that improves removal efficiency and adsorption capacity was determined. The results showed that the CR removal efficiency increased with modification up to a 2 M NaOH activation. The analysis of kinetics and isotherms of CR adsorption revealed that the Freundlich isotherm closely matched the experimental results, and the pseudo-second-order model explained the obtained results accurately. The investigation on reusability demonstrated that the adsorbents could be efficiently reused. Overall, glauconite and its NaOH-activated forms are effective and affordable adsorbents for removing CR from textile effluent.
To explore the adsorption of Congo red (CR) dye from textile effluent, natural clay glauconite was employed as a sustainable and inexpensive adsorbent. The effects of varying concentrations of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) on glauconite alteration were examined. Furthermore, this research focuses on the optimal NaOH concentration that improves removal efficiency and adsorption capacity. Thus, four NaOH solutions of concentrations ranging from 1 M to 4 M were used to activate glauconite raw (GL), indicated as GLACT1M, GLACT2M, GLACT3M, and GLACT4M. These samples were characterized using different analysis tools. The effects of starting concentration, adsorption time, adsorbent dosage, pH, temperature, and reusability on removal efficacy were all investigated. The data show that the CR removal efficiency increases with modification up to a 2 M NaOH activation, beyond which it begins to decrease. At 25 degrees C and pH 7, the CR removal efficiencies were similar to 77%, 72%, 80%, 34.5%, and 30.5% by GL, GLACT1M, GLACT2M, GLACT3M, and GLACT4M, respectively. Batch experiments were performed to explore both the kinetics and isotherms of CR adsorption to determine the impact of different experimental conditions accurately. Moreover, isotherm interpretations demonstrated that the Freundlich isotherm closely matches the experimental results. The pseudo-second-order model clearly explains the obtained results (R-2 = 0.998) from 5 to 25 ppm for GL, GLACT1M, GLACT2M, and GLACT3M, but GLACT4 is expressed by the Elovich model from 20 to 25 ppm. The reusability investigation revealed that the reusability of adsorbents could be achieved efficiently. The findings suggest that glauconite and its NaOH-activated forms can be employed as natural and affordable adsorbents for removing CR from textile effluent.

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