A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions

A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions. In this research, demolition waste from buildings has been studied for possible use as benzene removal adsorbent from aquatic solution. The effect of adsorbent dosage, contact time, initial benzene concentra...

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Main Authors: Saif S. Alquzweeni, Afrah A. Hassan, Rasha S. Alkizwini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Warsaw University of Life Sciences 2021-04-01
Series:Przegląd Naukowy Inżynieria i Kształtowanie Środowiska
Subjects:
Online Access: http://iks.pn.sggw.pl/PN91/A8/art8.pdf
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spelling doaj-fbeacea6e19344969e5b00a8e96eea832021-03-21T19:03:24ZengWarsaw University of Life SciencesPrzegląd Naukowy Inżynieria i Kształtowanie Środowiska1732-93532543-74962021-04-01301869710.22630/PNIKS.2021.30.1.8A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutionsSaif S. Alquzweeni0Afrah A. Hassan1Rasha S. Alkizwini2 University of Babylon, College of Engineering University of Babylon, College of Engineering University of Babylon, College of Engineering A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions. In this research, demolition waste from buildings has been studied for possible use as benzene removal adsorbent from aquatic solution. The effect of adsorbent dosage, contact time, initial benzene concentration, and initial pH on benzene adsorption capacity have been investigated in the batch adsorption experiments. The adsorption effects initially happened very rapidly and achieved equilibrium within 180 min. Benzene removal was observed to decrease by an increase in the initial concentration of benzene of 300–700 mg·L–1, an increase in the adsorbent dose of 0.4–2.4 g per 100 mL, where an optimum adsorbent dose equal to 1.2 g per 100 mL was found. The potential of adsorption increases with pH 3.0–7.0 to reach the maximum removal efficiency at pH 6.0. The findings showed that equilibrium data were adequately adapted and correlated with the Freundlich isotherm models. The average percentage of the removal at room temperature was about 98%. Results suggest that building demolition waste can be used effectively in industrial wastewater treatment for the removal of aromatic hydrocarbon, benzene, as a low-cost option. http://iks.pn.sggw.pl/PN91/A8/art8.pdf building demolition wastebenzeneequilibriumftir analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saif S. Alquzweeni
Afrah A. Hassan
Rasha S. Alkizwini
spellingShingle Saif S. Alquzweeni
Afrah A. Hassan
Rasha S. Alkizwini
A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions
Przegląd Naukowy Inżynieria i Kształtowanie Środowiska
building demolition waste
benzene
equilibrium
ftir analysis
author_facet Saif S. Alquzweeni
Afrah A. Hassan
Rasha S. Alkizwini
author_sort Saif S. Alquzweeni
title A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions
title_short A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions
title_full A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions
title_fullStr A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions
title_full_unstemmed A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions
title_sort novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions
publisher Warsaw University of Life Sciences
series Przegląd Naukowy Inżynieria i Kształtowanie Środowiska
issn 1732-9353
2543-7496
publishDate 2021-04-01
description A novel application of building demolition waste for removal benzene from aqueous solutions. In this research, demolition waste from buildings has been studied for possible use as benzene removal adsorbent from aquatic solution. The effect of adsorbent dosage, contact time, initial benzene concentration, and initial pH on benzene adsorption capacity have been investigated in the batch adsorption experiments. The adsorption effects initially happened very rapidly and achieved equilibrium within 180 min. Benzene removal was observed to decrease by an increase in the initial concentration of benzene of 300–700 mg·L–1, an increase in the adsorbent dose of 0.4–2.4 g per 100 mL, where an optimum adsorbent dose equal to 1.2 g per 100 mL was found. The potential of adsorption increases with pH 3.0–7.0 to reach the maximum removal efficiency at pH 6.0. The findings showed that equilibrium data were adequately adapted and correlated with the Freundlich isotherm models. The average percentage of the removal at room temperature was about 98%. Results suggest that building demolition waste can be used effectively in industrial wastewater treatment for the removal of aromatic hydrocarbon, benzene, as a low-cost option.
topic building demolition waste
benzene
equilibrium
ftir analysis
url http://iks.pn.sggw.pl/PN91/A8/art8.pdf
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