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Adsorptive Removal of Malachite Green Dye onto Coal-Associated Soil and Conditions Optimization

Adsorption Science & Technology 2021 25 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.
T.R. Sundararaman, P. Senthil Kumar, P. Senthil Kumar, A. Saravanan, T.R. Sundararaman, P. Senthil Kumar, P. Senthil Kumar, R.V. Hemavathy, A. Saravanan, R.V. Hemavathy, P. Senthil Kumar, A. Saravanan, S. Karishma, S. Karishma, P. Senthil Kumar, P. Senthil Kumar, P. Senthil Kumar, P. Senthil Kumar, A. Saravanan, A. Saravanan, A. Saravanan, A. Saravanan, A. Saravanan, M. Millicent Mabel, R.V. Hemavathy, R.V. Hemavathy, S. Karishma, S. Karishma, S. Jeevanantham, R. Hemavathi, R. Hemavathi, A. Ishwariya, A. Ishwariya, S. Kowsalya, S. Kowsalya

Summary

Researchers investigated the adsorptive removal of malachite green dye from water using coal-associated soil as an adsorbent, characterising the material by SEM and FTIR and optimising batch parameters including adsorbent dose, pH, temperature, and contact time to achieve maximum dye removal.

The present research was investigated to eliminate the cationic dye (malachite green (MG)) from the water environment using coal-associated soil. The adsorbent material was characterized using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectrophotometer (FTIR) analyses. Batch experiments were performed to investigate the different factors which affect the adsorption study. The maximum percentage removal of MG dye was attained as follows: adsorbent dose of 1.0 g/L (0.2 to 1.6 g/L), solution pH of 6.0 (2.0 to 9.0), temperature of 30°C (30 to 60°C), time contact of 60min (10 to 90 min), and dye’s concentration of 25 mg/L (25 to 150 mg/L). The adsorption isotherm was studied with four different isotherm models and results showed that the Freundlich isotherm model gave the best fit than the other nonlinear models to designate the isotherm behaviours with [Formula: see text] value of 0.9568, and the maximum adsorption capacity of coal-associated soil for MG dye adsorption is 89.97 mg/g. The evaluation of kinetic studies was performed by using three different kinetic models, where it exposed that pseudofirst order providing the best fit with [Formula: see text] value of 0.96 (25 to 150 mg/L). The thermodynamic parameters Gibbs free energy ( ΔG°), entropy ( ΔS°), and enthalpy ( ΔH°) were endorsing that the present adsorption system was exothermic. Thus, the experimental results state that coal-associated soil could be an alternative material for the exclusion of dyes from water.

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