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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Human Health Effects Remediation Sign in to save

Adsorption of Sunscreen Compounds from Wastewater Using Commercial Activated Carbon: Detailed Kinetic and Thermodynamic Analyses

Water 2023 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ştefania Gheorghe, Ştefania Gheorghe, Ştefania Gheorghe, Ştefania Gheorghe, Ştefania Gheorghe, Florentina Laura Chiriac Ştefania Gheorghe, Vasile Ion Iancu, Vasile Ion Iancu, Luoana Florentina Pascu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Florentina Laura Chiriac Iuliana Păun, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Florinela Pirvu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Vasile Ion Iancu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Florentina Laura Chiriac Vasile Ion Iancu, Ştefania Gheorghe, Luoana Florentina Pascu, Iuliana Păun, Ştefania Gheorghe, Vasile Ion Iancu, Luoana Florentina Pascu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Florentina Laura Chiriac Ioana Alexandra Ionescu, Florentina Laura Chiriac Luoana Florentina Pascu, Florentina Laura Chiriac

Summary

This paper is not directly about microplastics; it examines the removal of UV-filter sunscreen chemicals from wastewater using activated carbon, finding effective adsorption under various pH and concentration conditions, with relevance to aquatic pollution from personal care products.

Study Type Environmental

Sunscreen compounds are one of the most toxic substances detected in the aqueous environment. However, these molecules are continuously utilized in a various range of products to provide protection against UV radiation. The removal of three sunscreen compounds, 4-hydroxybenzophenone (4-HBP), 2,4-dihydroxybenzophenone (BP-1) and oxybenzone (BP-3), by commercial activated carbon (AC) was investigated using batch adsorption experiments. Different operational characteristics, such as adsorbent dosing, interaction time, solution pH and starting sunscreen compound concentration, were studied. The adsorption capacity of the AC material was assessed using a liquid chromatograph associated with a mass spectrometer detector (LC–MS/MS). Two isotherm models were utilized to explained the target compound adsorption phenomenon (Langmuir and Freundlich), while pseudo-first and -second kinetic orders and thermodynamics were utilized to examine the adsorption mechanism. The maximum adsorption capacities determined from the Langmuir isotherms were established as 43.8 mg/g for 4-HBP, 48.8 mg/g for BP-3 and 41.1 mg/g for BP-1. The thermodynamic parameters revealed the following: a negative ΔG° (<20 KJ/mol) and ΔH° and a positive ΔS° of the targeted sunscreen compounds adsorbed onto AC suggest a spontaneous and exothermic adsorption process, favored by lower temperature, proving that the physical sorption mechanism prevailed. Effective adsorption of 4-HBP, BP-3 and BP-1 from real wastewater samples proved the viability of sunscreen compound removal using commercial AC material. This paper offers promising results on a sustainable, economical and environmentally friendly method for removal of ubiquitous sunscreen compounds from wastewater, as a possible enhancement of treatment processes.

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