Abstract:
Some heavy metals are highly toxic as ions or in form of compounds. Ions or
compounds of heavy metals, which are soluble in water, can be readily absorbed into
living organisms. Chromium
(VI
) is a harmful heavy metal ion which is
indiscriminately discharged to aquatic-body through the effluents of process-plants of
leather tanning, metallurgy, electroplating, textile dyeing, paints, ink, etc. and thus
aquatic environment is being severely polluted. These industrial effluents contain
chromium
(VI
), which is much higher than the tolerance limit; 0.5 mg·L
-1
in industrial
wastewater
(EPA
). So, the removal of Cr
(VI
) from wastewater is prerequisite prior to
discharge of the toxic ion into aquatic environment. The present study was undertaken
to investigate the efficiency of Dust Black Tea leaves
(DBTL
), a waste of tea process
plant, as an adsorbent to remove chromium
(VI
) from aqueous solution. Dust black tea
leaves
(DBTL
)was collected and washed repeatedly with hot water until the color
materials of the leaves were entirely eliminated. Small surface area, heterogeneous
surface morphology and some functional groups were observed in dried DBTL using
BET surface analyzer, SEM-EDX and ATR-IR.Chromium
(VI
)in aqueous solution was
analyzed colorimetrically by forming a violet complex of Cr
(VI
)with 1,5-
Diphenylcarbazide using UV-visible Spectrophotometric method.
In this process, Cr
(VI
), due to its contact with DBTL, was reduced to Cr
(III
) along with
adsorption of Cr
(VI
)on DBTL. Concentration of Cr
(VI
) and Cr
(III
) in solution were
quantitatively determined by the colorimetric method. Both adsorption and reduction
were found to be dependent on pH of chromium
(VI
) solution. Since the minimum
reduction of Cr
(VI
) to Cr
(III
) and insignificant quantity of adsorption of Cr
(III
) on
DBTL were found at pH 2.0 of the solution, the pH 2.0 was considered as an optimum
condition to obtain the maximum removal capacity of DBTL. In each experiment,
reduced amount of Cr
(VI
)to Cr
(III
)was deducted from the total removal to receive the
amount adsorbed only.
Batch adsorption kinetic experiments were conducted to investigate the effects of initial
concentration of Cr
(VI
), pH of Cr
(VI
) solution, process temperature and particle-size of
DBTL. Related-experimental data were verified by applying to different models of
kinetic equations, such as, simple first order rate equation, second order rate equation ,
pseudo first order rate equation, pseudo second order rate equation and Elovich
equation. The highest value of regression co-efficient, R
2
(0.999
)supported that pseudo
second kinetic equation is best-fitted for different initial concentrations, solution pH,
temperatures and particle-size of DBTL. The equilibrium amount of Cr
(VI
)adsorbed
(qe
), equilibrium concentration
(Ce
)of Cr
(VI
) solution and the pseudo-second order rate
constant, k2p were calculated from the best-fitted pseudo-second order kinetic plots for
different initial concentrations at pH 2.0. The maximum adsorption capacity, qm =
303.03 mg·g
-1
, was calculated from the above kinetic data
(qe and Ce
), using best fitted
Langmuir equation. For a fixed concentration of Cr
(VI
), the equilibrium amount
adsorbed
(qe
), equilibrium concentration
(Ce
) and rate constant
(k2p
) were calculated
from the best-fitted pseudo-second order kinetic plots for different
(i
) temperatures at
pH 2.0, (ii
o
) pH at 30
C and (iii
) sizes of DBTL at pH 2.0 and 30
o
C.
The effect of temperature on adsorption kinetics showed that the equilibrium amount of
Cr
(VI
)adsorbed decreased with increase of temperature. This behavior indicated
exothermic nature of the adsorption at pH 2.0. Using the pseudo-second order rate
constant, the activation energy Ea. of adsorption was determined from Arrhenius plot
and the value was found to be 7.37 kJ·mol
-1
which is very small compared to that
(Ea =
-1
65 - 250 kJ·mol
)of chemical adsorption.
Thermodynamic parameters: ΔG
o
o
o
, ΔH
and ΔS
for Cr
(VI
) adsorption on DBTL were
determined from the equilibrium adsorption constant
(Kc
). The negative value
(-27.38
-1
kJ mol
o
)of ΔH
indicated the adsorption of chromium
(VI
) on DBTL was exothermic,
spontaneous and physical in nature. The positive values from + 2.03 to + 5.60 kJ mol
-1
o
of ΔG
increased with increase of temperatures from 15 to 50
o
C which indicated the
process was slow and less feasible due to the enhancement of the reduction of Cr
(VI
) at
high temperature. The negative value of ΔS
o
-1
(-0.102 kJ·mol
-1
K
)predicted the
decreased randomness through the adsorption of chromium (VI
) on DBTL.
The effect of pH of solution showed that the equilibrium amount of Cr
(VI
)adsorbed
linearly decreased with increase of pH from 2.0 to 6.0 and then became slow to the pH
8.0 indicating electrostatic interaction between anionic Cr
(VI
) and positively charged
protonated-DBTL-surface at low pH. The effect of particle-size shown that the
equilibrium amount of chromium
(VI
) adsorbed on DBTL decreased with increase of
particle-sizes of DBTL due to the lowering of surface area. The rate of adsorption
decreased with increase of particle-size of DBTL from 106 to 450 µm. The higher rate
of Cr
(VI
) uptake by smaller size of particle is due to the greater accessibility to pores
and greater surface area per unit mass of small sizes of DBTL.
The transfer mechanism of the adsorption of Cr
(VI
) on DBTL was investigated using
Weber and Morris’s intraparticle diffusion model equation towards the kinetic data for
different concentrations, temperatures, pH and sizes of DBTL.The effects of
concentration and temperature have shown that the film diffusion is dominative for the
adsorption of chromium
(VI
) on DBTL at pH 2.0 for all concentrations. Again, the
effects of solution pH and particle-size revealed that the intraparticle diffusion is
favorable at high pH of the solution and large size of DBTL-particle, but at low pH and
small particle-size, the adsorption is dominated by film diffusion.
Equilibrium adsorption isotherms at different temperatures were constructed using 6
hours as predetermined equilibrium time at pH 2.0. Different equations for adsorption
isotherm, such as Langmuir, Freundlich, Temkin and Dubinin-Radushkevich
(D-R
)
equations were applied to the equilibrium adsorption data obtained experimentally to
evaluate the feasibility of the process. The results indicated that the Langmuir equation
fits the data better than any other of the above isotherm equations. The maximum
monolayer adsorption capacity, qm was calculated and found to be 303.03 mg·g
-1
at 30
o
C which decreased with increase of temperature. The Langmuir constant, b was used to
determine the separation factor, Rb and thermodynamic parameters to understand the
mechanism of the process. At low concentration and low temperature, values of Rb were
found to be near to 1. These results indicated that the adsorption was favorable at this
condition. The negative value of ΔG
o
-1
(-19.79 kJ∙mol
)indicated the uptake of
chromium
(VI
) on DBTL was spontaneous and the positive value of ΔH
o
-1
(15.3 kJ∙mol
)
which is too insufficient to that required for occurring chemical adsorption and the value
of ΔS
o
-1
(+ 0.11 kJ∙mol
-1
∙K
)might be due to small amount of reduction of chromium
(VI
) to chromium (III
), during the adsorption of chromium (VI
) on DBTL.
The mean adsorption energy, E at different temperatures were also calculated from the
Dubinin-Radushkevich isotherm and the values were limited within the range of – 8.8 to
-12.7 kJ·mol
-1
which indicated that the adsorption of Cr
(VI
) on DBTL might be
controlled by physical in nature.
The effects of pH and particle-size of DBTL on the adsorption isotherm were also
investigated by applying different isotherms model equations. The maximum monolayer
adsorption capacity was calculated using well fitted Langmuir isotherm equation. The
results showed that the values were decreased with increase of both of solution pH and
particle-size, like the same as the results obtained from kinetic study.
A comparison of the Attenuated Total Reflectance Infra-red
(ATR-IR
)spectra of un-
adsorbed and Cr
(VI
) adsorbed DBTL shown that -OH, C=C, C-O and aromatic =C-H
groups of DBTL were interacted
(by shifted their positions) with Cr and a new peak
appeared at 717.52 cm
-1
for –C-Cr interaction.
Scanning Electron Microscopic
(SEM) microgram of Cr
(VI
) adsorbed DBTL shown
some spherical chromium particles on the surface which were confirmed by Energy
Dispersive X-ray (EDX
) spectrum. Again, the deposition of chromium on DBTL surface
are not homogeneously distributed which was determined by EDX point analysis of
Cr
(VI
) adsorbed DBTL surface.
By treating with 2M sodium hydroxide solution, adsorbed chromium
(VI
)was fully
recovered from the Cr
(VI
)-adsorbed-DBTL surface in order to eliminate the creation of
secondary pollutant.