عنوان المقالة:Removal of Cu2+ Ions from Aqueous Solutions by Adsorption on a Libyan Soil
علي يوسف عكاشة | Aly Y. Okasha | 11043
- نوع النشر
- مجلة علمية
- المؤلفون بالعربي
- Aly Y. Okasha and Hesham G. Ibrahim
- الملخص العربي
- Abstract: Heavy metals are well recognized as potential health hazards as they can neither be degraded nor biologically detoxified. This experimental study aims to investigate the possible use of Libyan local soil, Ashkida soil, mined in the Southern Province of Libya as a low cost adsorbent to remove copper ions from aqueous solutions. In this work, the effects of various parameters such as adsorbent dosage, initial concentration of copper, agitation rate, contact time and solution pH level on the adsorption efficiency are investigated through batch experiments at room temperature. The results indicate that the optimum conditions for copper removal from aqueous solutions are 60 minutes contact time, 10 g/L adsorbent dose and 500 rpm agitation rate at natural pH value. The results are fitted to Freundlich, Langmuir, Temkin and Dubinin-Radushkevich isotherms. A satisfactory agreement between the experimental data and the model-predicted values is expressed by the correlation coefficient, r 2 , and the total mean error, E%. Freundlich model offers the best representation of adsorption process revealing a monolayer adsorption capacity, qmax, of 27.03 mg/g. A comparison of kinetic models applied to the adsorption of copper ions on the adsorbent is evaluated by simple first order, pseudo first order and pseudo second order kinetic models. Kinetic parameters, rate constant, equilibrium sorption capacities and related correlation coefficients for each kinetic model are determined revealing that the pseudo second order kinetic model is in a better correlation with the experimental data in comparison with the other isotherms.
- تاريخ النشر
- 09/06/2010
- الناشر
- J. of Environmental Science and Engineering (USA)
- رابط الملف
- تحميل (202 مرات التحميل)
- الكلمات المفتاحية
- Copper, adsorption, Libyan soil, isotherms, kinetics