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Application of response surface methodology for color removing from dyeing effluent using de-oiled activated algal biomass

Bulletin of the National Research Centre/Bulletin of the National Research Center 2021 19 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Samar A. El-Mekkawi, Rehab A. Abdelghaffar, Fatma Abdelghaffar, Sanaa A. Abo El-Enin

Summary

Activated de-oiled Chlorella vulgaris microalgal biomass was tested as a biosorbent for removing Acid Red dye from dyeing effluent, with response surface methodology used to optimize pH, dosage, and contact time, achieving high color removal efficiency.

Abstract Background Conservation of the ecosystem is a prime concern of human communities. Industrial development should adopt this concern. Unfortunately, various related activities release lots of noxious materials concurrently with significant leakage of renewable resources. This work presents a new biosorbent activated de-oiled microalgae, Chlorella vulgaris , (AC) for biosorption of Acid Red 1 (AR1) from aqueous solution simulated to textile dyeing effluent. The biosorption characteristics of AC were explored as a function of the process parameters, namely pH, time, and initial dye concentration using response surface methodology (RSM). Results Optimization is carried out using the desirability approach of the process parameters for maximum dye removal%. The ANOVA analysis of the predicted quadratic model elucidated significant model terms with a regression coefficient value of 0.97, F value of 109.66, and adequate precision of 34.32 that emphasizes the applicability of the model to navigate the design space. The optimization depends on the priority of minimizing the time of the process to save energy and treating high concentrated effluent resulted in removal % up to 83.5%. The chemical structure and surface morphology of AC, and the dye-loaded biomass (AB) were characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy-dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX), and transmission electron microscope (TEM). The activation process transforms the biomass surface into a regular and small homogeneous size that increases the surface area and ultimately enhances its adsorption capacity Conclusion The optimization of the process parameters simultaneously using RSM performs a high-accurate model which describes the relationship between the parameters and the response through minimum number of experiments. This study performed a step towards an integrated sustainable solution applicable for treating industrial effluents through a zero-waste process. Using the overloaded biomass is going into further studies as micronutrients for agricultural soil.

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