Phenol Adsorption on Nitrogen-enriched Activated Carbon Prepared from Bamboo Residues

Nitrogen-enriched activated carbons prepared from bamboo residues were characterized by means of BET, XPS, and elemental analysis. Then adsorption experiments were carried out to study the effects of various physicochemical parameters such as contact time, temperature, pH, and initial concentration....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ji Zhang, Xiao-Juan Jin, Jian-Min Gao, Xiu-Dong Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: North Carolina State University 2013-12-01
Series:BioResources
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.cnr.ncsu.edu/index.php/BioRes/article/view/BioRes_09_1_969_Zhang_Phenol_Adsorption_Bamboo
id doaj-04964f0bb25a4098aa7399f1ccd51f85
record_format Article
spelling doaj-04964f0bb25a4098aa7399f1ccd51f852020-11-24T23:57:15ZengNorth Carolina State UniversityBioResources1930-21261930-21262013-12-019196998310.15376/biores.9.1.969-983Phenol Adsorption on Nitrogen-enriched Activated Carbon Prepared from Bamboo ResiduesJi Zhang0Xiao-Juan Jin1Jian-Min Gao2Xiu-Dong Zhang3Beijing Forestry UniversityBeijing Forestry UniversitySchool of Material Science and Technology, Beijing Forestry University, 35 Qinghua East Road, Haidian, 100083, Beijing, ChinaBeijing Forestry UniversityNitrogen-enriched activated carbons prepared from bamboo residues were characterized by means of BET, XPS, and elemental analysis. Then adsorption experiments were carried out to study the effects of various physicochemical parameters such as contact time, temperature, pH, and initial concentration. Adsorption equilibrium was achieved within 120 min at a phenol concentration of 250 mg/L. When the pH was 4 and 0.1 g of the carbon absorbent and 100 mL of phenol solution at 250 mg/L were used, the phenol adsorption of the ACs with melamine and urea modifications were 219.09 mg/g and 214.45 mg/g, respectively. Both were greater than the capacity of unmodified AC, which was 163.82 mg/g. The Langmuir isotherm adsorption equation well described the experimental adsorption isotherms. The adsorption kinetics was well explained by pseudo-second-order kinetics rather than the pseudo-first-order. In conclusion, the nitrogen-enriched activated carbon proposed as adsorbents of the phenol wastewater were shown to be effective, which also means that bamboo residues have promise as activated carbon precursors for liquid phase adsorbents for environmental protection.http://ojs.cnr.ncsu.edu/index.php/BioRes/article/view/BioRes_09_1_969_Zhang_Phenol_Adsorption_BambooActivated carbonNitrogen-enrichedBamboo residuesPhenol adsorption
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ji Zhang
Xiao-Juan Jin
Jian-Min Gao
Xiu-Dong Zhang
spellingShingle Ji Zhang
Xiao-Juan Jin
Jian-Min Gao
Xiu-Dong Zhang
Phenol Adsorption on Nitrogen-enriched Activated Carbon Prepared from Bamboo Residues
BioResources
Activated carbon
Nitrogen-enriched
Bamboo residues
Phenol adsorption
author_facet Ji Zhang
Xiao-Juan Jin
Jian-Min Gao
Xiu-Dong Zhang
author_sort Ji Zhang
title Phenol Adsorption on Nitrogen-enriched Activated Carbon Prepared from Bamboo Residues
title_short Phenol Adsorption on Nitrogen-enriched Activated Carbon Prepared from Bamboo Residues
title_full Phenol Adsorption on Nitrogen-enriched Activated Carbon Prepared from Bamboo Residues
title_fullStr Phenol Adsorption on Nitrogen-enriched Activated Carbon Prepared from Bamboo Residues
title_full_unstemmed Phenol Adsorption on Nitrogen-enriched Activated Carbon Prepared from Bamboo Residues
title_sort phenol adsorption on nitrogen-enriched activated carbon prepared from bamboo residues
publisher North Carolina State University
series BioResources
issn 1930-2126
1930-2126
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Nitrogen-enriched activated carbons prepared from bamboo residues were characterized by means of BET, XPS, and elemental analysis. Then adsorption experiments were carried out to study the effects of various physicochemical parameters such as contact time, temperature, pH, and initial concentration. Adsorption equilibrium was achieved within 120 min at a phenol concentration of 250 mg/L. When the pH was 4 and 0.1 g of the carbon absorbent and 100 mL of phenol solution at 250 mg/L were used, the phenol adsorption of the ACs with melamine and urea modifications were 219.09 mg/g and 214.45 mg/g, respectively. Both were greater than the capacity of unmodified AC, which was 163.82 mg/g. The Langmuir isotherm adsorption equation well described the experimental adsorption isotherms. The adsorption kinetics was well explained by pseudo-second-order kinetics rather than the pseudo-first-order. In conclusion, the nitrogen-enriched activated carbon proposed as adsorbents of the phenol wastewater were shown to be effective, which also means that bamboo residues have promise as activated carbon precursors for liquid phase adsorbents for environmental protection.
topic Activated carbon
Nitrogen-enriched
Bamboo residues
Phenol adsorption
url http://ojs.cnr.ncsu.edu/index.php/BioRes/article/view/BioRes_09_1_969_Zhang_Phenol_Adsorption_Bamboo
work_keys_str_mv AT jizhang phenoladsorptiononnitrogenenrichedactivatedcarbonpreparedfrombambooresidues
AT xiaojuanjin phenoladsorptiononnitrogenenrichedactivatedcarbonpreparedfrombambooresidues
AT jianmingao phenoladsorptiononnitrogenenrichedactivatedcarbonpreparedfrombambooresidues
AT xiudongzhang phenoladsorptiononnitrogenenrichedactivatedcarbonpreparedfrombambooresidues
_version_ 1725454788339957760