JOURNAL ARTICLE

Modeling of heavy metals removal from aqueous solution using activated carbon produced from cotton stalk

Mohamed El ZayatEdward H. Smith

Year: 2013 Journal:   Water Science & Technology Vol: 67 (7)Pages: 1612-1619   Publisher: Pergamon Press

Abstract

Activated carbon produced from cotton stalks was examined for the removal of heavy metal contaminants. Adsorption studies in completely mixed batch reactors were used to generate equilibrium pH adsorption edges. Continuous flow experiments using the activated carbon in fixed beds were conducted to determine heavy metal breakthrough versus bed volumes treated. At given pH value in the range 5–7, the adsorption capacity was similar for copper and lead and clearly greater than for cadmium. A surface titration experiment indicated negative surface charge of the activated carbon at pH > 6, meaning that electrostatic attraction of the divalent heavy metals can occur below the pH required for precipitation. Substantive metal removal below the pH of zero charge might be due to surface complexation. Accordingly, a surface complexation model approach that utilizes an electrostatic term in the double-layer description was used to estimate equilibrium constants for the protolysis interactions of the activated carbon surface as well as equilibria between background ions used to establish ionic strength and the sorbent surface. Pb(II) adsorption edges were best modeled using inner-layer surface complexation of Pb2+, while Cd(II) and Cu(II) data were best fit by outer-layer complexes with Me2+. The full set of equilibrium constants were used as input in a dual-rate dynamic model to simulate the breakthrough curves of the target metals (Pb, Cu and Cd) from fixed bed experiments and to estimate external (or film) diffusion and internal (surface) diffusion coefficients.

Keywords:
Adsorption Activated carbon Chemistry Ionic strength Aqueous solution Surface charge Metal Titration Copper Metal ions in aqueous solution Diffusion Carbon fibers Inorganic chemistry Analytical Chemistry (journal) Thermodynamics Materials science Chromatography Physical chemistry Composite material Organic chemistry

Metrics

13
Cited By
0.69
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
0
Refs
0.78
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Adsorption and biosorption for pollutant removal
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Water Science and Technology

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

REMOVAL OF HEAVY METALS FROM AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS USING ACTIVATED CARBON

Ana MoldovanMaria-Alexandra HoaghiaOana CadarMarin Șenilă

Journal:   DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals) Year: 2017
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Activated carbon from residual oil fly ash for heavy metals removal from aqueous solution

Sirajus SalehinAsad S. AburizaizaM.A. Barakat

Journal:   Desalination and Water Treatment Year: 2015 Vol: 57 (1)Pages: 278-287
JOURNAL ARTICLE

REMOVAL OF HEAVY METALS FROM DYE EFFLUENT USING ACTIVATED CARBON PRODUCED FROM COCONUT SHELL

Onyeji, L

Journal:   Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) Year: 2011
JOURNAL ARTICLE

REMOVAL OF HEAVY METALS FROM DYE EFFLUENT USING ACTIVATED CARBON PRODUCED FROM COCONUT SHELL

L Onyeji

Journal:   Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) Year: 2011
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Removal of Heavy Metals From Aqueus Solution Using Activated Carbon Embedded Cryogels

Ceren Haktanır

Journal:   Hacettepe Journal of Biology and Chemistry Year: 2017 Vol: 1 (45)Pages: 135-142
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.