Using Natural Biomacromolecules for Adsorptive and Enzymatic Removal of Aniline Blue from Water
The present study investigated the adsorptive and enzymatic removal of aniline blue dye (AB) from aqueous solution using waxy riceprocessing waste (RW), peanut shell (PS), microbial waste of Aspergillus niger (MW) as low cost adsorbents, and laccase (Lac) as a biocatalyst. Commercial activated carbo...
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doaj-0ca155e41df54225922162b32c0dfee92020-11-24T21:16:23ZengMDPI AGMolecules1420-30492018-07-01237160610.3390/molecules23071606molecules23071606Using Natural Biomacromolecules for Adsorptive and Enzymatic Removal of Aniline Blue from WaterXiaojuan You0Enzhong Li1Jiayang Liu2Songhua Li3Fermentation Technology Division, Huanghuai University, Zhumadian 463000, ChinaFermentation Technology Division, Huanghuai University, Zhumadian 463000, ChinaFermentation Technology Division, Huanghuai University, Zhumadian 463000, ChinaHenan Dongfangrun Environmental Protection Technology Co. Ltd., Zhumadian 463000, ChinaThe present study investigated the adsorptive and enzymatic removal of aniline blue dye (AB) from aqueous solution using waxy riceprocessing waste (RW), peanut shell (PS), microbial waste of Aspergillus niger (MW) as low cost adsorbents, and laccase (Lac) as a biocatalyst. Commercial activated carbon (AC) was also employed to compare the adsorption performance with the three adsorbents. Dye removal was examined under various parameters in batch experiments. It was found that dye removal by RW and Lac was 89–94% noticeably better than that by MW and PS (20–70%). In any cases, AC produced the highest dye removal among the tested materials. The kinetics, isotherms, and thermodynamics were then analyzed to elucidate the adsorption process by the four adsorbents. The pseudo-second order kinetic was superior to the pseudo first order kinetic model in describing adsorption for all adsorbents. The Langmuir model fitted the adsorption process very well, indicating monolayer coverage of dyes on a solid surface. A thermodynamic analysis of enthalpy (ΔH°), entropy (ΔS°), and Gibbs free energy (ΔG°) classified the adsorption as a nonspontaneous and endothermic process. The results reveal diverse natural materials (e.g., processing waste RW) as novel substitutes for traditional activated carbon, as well as laccase as a green catalyst for the treatment of dye wastewater.http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/23/7/1606adsorptionadsorbentlaccaseaniline bluedye removal |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Xiaojuan You Enzhong Li Jiayang Liu Songhua Li |
spellingShingle |
Xiaojuan You Enzhong Li Jiayang Liu Songhua Li Using Natural Biomacromolecules for Adsorptive and Enzymatic Removal of Aniline Blue from Water Molecules adsorption adsorbent laccase aniline blue dye removal |
author_facet |
Xiaojuan You Enzhong Li Jiayang Liu Songhua Li |
author_sort |
Xiaojuan You |
title |
Using Natural Biomacromolecules for Adsorptive and Enzymatic Removal of Aniline Blue from Water |
title_short |
Using Natural Biomacromolecules for Adsorptive and Enzymatic Removal of Aniline Blue from Water |
title_full |
Using Natural Biomacromolecules for Adsorptive and Enzymatic Removal of Aniline Blue from Water |
title_fullStr |
Using Natural Biomacromolecules for Adsorptive and Enzymatic Removal of Aniline Blue from Water |
title_full_unstemmed |
Using Natural Biomacromolecules for Adsorptive and Enzymatic Removal of Aniline Blue from Water |
title_sort |
using natural biomacromolecules for adsorptive and enzymatic removal of aniline blue from water |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Molecules |
issn |
1420-3049 |
publishDate |
2018-07-01 |
description |
The present study investigated the adsorptive and enzymatic removal of aniline blue dye (AB) from aqueous solution using waxy riceprocessing waste (RW), peanut shell (PS), microbial waste of Aspergillus niger (MW) as low cost adsorbents, and laccase (Lac) as a biocatalyst. Commercial activated carbon (AC) was also employed to compare the adsorption performance with the three adsorbents. Dye removal was examined under various parameters in batch experiments. It was found that dye removal by RW and Lac was 89–94% noticeably better than that by MW and PS (20–70%). In any cases, AC produced the highest dye removal among the tested materials. The kinetics, isotherms, and thermodynamics were then analyzed to elucidate the adsorption process by the four adsorbents. The pseudo-second order kinetic was superior to the pseudo first order kinetic model in describing adsorption for all adsorbents. The Langmuir model fitted the adsorption process very well, indicating monolayer coverage of dyes on a solid surface. A thermodynamic analysis of enthalpy (ΔH°), entropy (ΔS°), and Gibbs free energy (ΔG°) classified the adsorption as a nonspontaneous and endothermic process. The results reveal diverse natural materials (e.g., processing waste RW) as novel substitutes for traditional activated carbon, as well as laccase as a green catalyst for the treatment of dye wastewater. |
topic |
adsorption adsorbent laccase aniline blue dye removal |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/23/7/1606 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT xiaojuanyou usingnaturalbiomacromoleculesforadsorptiveandenzymaticremovalofanilinebluefromwater AT enzhongli usingnaturalbiomacromoleculesforadsorptiveandenzymaticremovalofanilinebluefromwater AT jiayangliu usingnaturalbiomacromoleculesforadsorptiveandenzymaticremovalofanilinebluefromwater AT songhuali usingnaturalbiomacromoleculesforadsorptiveandenzymaticremovalofanilinebluefromwater |
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1726015698693521408 |