4.7 Article

Adsorption of Direct Blue 78 Using Chitosan and Cyclodextrins as Adsorbents

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym11061003

Keywords

adsorption; chitosan; beta-CDs; Direct Blue; kinetics; isotherm; pulsed light

Funding

  1. European project DYES4EVER (Use of cyclodextrins for treatment of wastewater in the textile industry to recover and reuse textile dyes) within the LIFE + 2012 Environment Policy and Governance project application program [LIFE12 ENV/ES/000309]

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The dyeing industry is one of the most polluting in the world. The adsorption of dyes by polymeric matrixes can be used to minimize the discharge of dyes into the environment. In the present study, chitosan-NaOH and beta-cyclodextrin-epichlorohydrin polymers were used to remove the dye Direct Blue 78 from a wastewater model. To understand the adsorption behavior of Direct Blue 78 onto the polymers, adsorption rate and maximum adsorption capacity were calculated using kinetic tests and isotherm curves respectively. The kinetic data and mechanism of the adsorption process were analyzed by three models and the equilibrium data by three adsorption isotherms; also the different thermodynamic parameters were calculated. Results showed that the adsorption process follows pseudo-second-order kinetics in both polymers and the Langmuir isotherm best-fitted data for chitosan-NaOH polymer and the Freundlich isotherm for the beta-CDs-EPI polymer. The adsorption process is exothermic in both cases and spontaneous for the beta-CDs-EPI polymer to a certain temperature and not spontaneous for the chitosan-NaOH polymer and beta-CDs-EPI polymer at higher temperatures. The complementary action of an advanced oxidation process eliminated >99% of the dye from water. The coupled process seems to be suitable for reducing the environmental impact of the dyeing industry.

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