Harpreet KaurRajvir KaurN YousefiA FatehizadehE AziziM AhmadianA AhmadiA ZadehA ToolabiJ SachaA W M IpJ BarfordG MckayG VijayakumarR TamilarasanM DharmendirakumarY HoG MckayG M WalkerL HansenJ A And HannaS J AllenM StydiniI DimitrisX VerykiosSyed ShabudeenPM DoganM AlkanY OnganerT KhanV SinghD KumarM KhosraviS AzizianM KobyaO CanM BayramogluEl-Ashtoukhy E S ZA NaimabadiMovahedian AttarH ShahsavaniAM IsikD T SponzaU EtimE InamS UmorenU M EduokM Uddin M T, RukanuzzamanM KhanM A IslamR GongX ZhangH LiuY SunB LiuR HanD DingY XuW ZouY WangY LiL ZouV StadenCompositione DePer MedicamentorumGenerS S ReddyB KotaiahN S P ReddyI MaghriA KenzM ElkoualiO TananeM TalbiA MittalL KurupJ MittalI LangmuirH FreundlichY HoG MckayW J WeberJ C Morris
Toxicity caused by the presence of synthetic dyes in aquatic system is extremely important from the environmental point of view because most of these dyes are toxic, carcinogenic and mutagenic.In the present work the ability to remove 'Congo red' from aqueous solution has been studied by using waste material Pigeon dropping, as an adsorbent.Effects of various parameters on adsorption process such as; contact time, adsorbent dose, initial dye concentrations, pH and temperature was studied.The isotherm data was described by the Langmuir and Freundlich adsorption isotherms.The kinetic data were used for modelling from the second-order kinetic models and intra-particle diffusion model.The thermodynamic studies showed that the process is exothermic and physiosorption.The present investigation confirms that Pigeon dropping can be successfully employed as a good adsorbent for the removal of dye from effluent.
Abdurrahman AbubakarSamaila Muazu Batagarawa
Thouraya TurkiAbdelkader HamdouniAlexandru Eneşca
Chanut BamroongwongdeeSongsiri SuwanneeManit Kongsomsaksiri
Davoud BalarakAmir Hossein MahviMoo Joon ShimSeung‐Mok Lee
Reena MishraAmit ChattreeShazia Siddiqui