Journal Article10.1016/J.JHAZMAT.2006.07.072
Dye removal by low cost adsorbents: hazelnut shells in comparison with wood sawdust.
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TL;DR: Batch adsorption of Methylene Blue and Acid Blue 25 onto ground hazelnut shells was studied in comparison with sawdust to explore the potential use of this material as low cost adsorbent for dye removal in dyehouse effluents.
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About: This article is published in Journal of Hazardous Materials. The article was published on 02 Apr 2007. The article focuses on the topics: Sawdust & Adsorption.
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Citations
Isotherm, thermodynamic, kinetics and adsorption mechanism studies of methyl orange by surfactant modified silkworm exuviae.
TL;DR: The results indicate that HDTMAB-modified silkworm exuviae could be employed as low-cost material for the removal of methyl orange anionic dye from wastewater.
Synthesis of polymeric aerogels with different fillers and their application for the removal of emerging pollutants: a comparative study
Subhasis Ghosh,Poushali Chakraborty,Avijit Bhowal,Suvendu Manna,Papita Das +4 more
Assessment of Biosorption Potential of Poplar Sawdust for Removal of Dyes from Wastewater under Single and Binary System
Vartika Gupta,Arunima Nayak,Brij Bhushan,Vijay Kumar +3 more
TL;DR: This study assesses the biosorption potential of poplar sawdust for removing dyes (MB and CR) from wastewater under single and binary systems, revealing its effectiveness and potential as a cost-effective biosorbent for diverse wastewater conditions.
Removal of cationic dyes by poly(AA-co-AMPS)/montmorillonite nanocomposite hydrogel
TL;DR: In this paper, the adsorption feasibility of a cationic dye, methylene blue (MB), onto an anionic hydrogel nanocomposite was investigated in detail.
Effective Adsorption of Anionic Dye, Alizarin Red S, from Aqueous Solutions on Activated Clay Modified by Iron Oxide
TL;DR: In this article, the adsorption process reached equilibrium within 90 min, and the removal efficiency increased with the enhancement of initial dye concentration, adsorbent dosage, and contact time, but decreased with an enhancement of solution pH.
References
Sorption of dye from aqueous solution by peat
Yuh-Shan Ho,Gordon McKay +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the sorption of two dyes, namely Basic Blue 69 and Acid Blue 25 onto peat has been studied in terms of pseudo-second order and first order mechanisms for chemical sorption as well as an intraparticle diffusion mechanism process.
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Use of cellulose-based wastes for adsorption of dyes from aqueous solutions.
TL;DR: Based on the adsorption capacity, it was shown that banana peel was more effective than orange peel and intraparticle diffusion of dyes within the particle was identified to be rate limiting.
1.7K
Dye removal from wastewater using activated carbon developed from sawdust: adsorption equilibrium and kinetics.
TL;DR: The results indicate that the Mahogany sawdust carbon could be employed as a low cost alternative to commercial activated carbon in the removal of dyes from wastewater.
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Production of granular activated carbon from fruit stones and nutshells and evaluation of their physical, chemical and adsorption properties
TL;DR: In this article, the suitability of granular activated carbon for granular carbon production is not determined by material specific (elemental composition) but type-specific features, such as physical, chemical, surface and adsorption properties.
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