Loading…

Adsorptive features of acid-treated olive stones for drin pesticides: Equilibrium, kinetic and thermodynamic modeling studies

The adsorption behavior of drin pesticides from aqueous solution onto acid treated olive stones (ATOS) was investigated using stir bar sorptive extraction and gas chromatography coupled with mass spectroscopy. The effects of sorbent particle size, adsorbent dose, contact time, concentration of pesti...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Bioresource technology 2009-09, Vol.100 (18), p.4147-4155
Main Authors: El Bakouri, Hicham, Usero, José, Morillo, José, Ouassini, Abdelhamid
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The adsorption behavior of drin pesticides from aqueous solution onto acid treated olive stones (ATOS) was investigated using stir bar sorptive extraction and gas chromatography coupled with mass spectroscopy. The effects of sorbent particle size, adsorbent dose, contact time, concentration of pesticide solution and temperature on the adsorption processes were systematically studied in batch shaking sorption experiments. Maximum removal efficiency (94.8%) was reached for aldrin (0.5 mg L −1) using the fraction 63–100 μm of ATOS (solid/liquid ratio: 1 g L −1). Experimental data were modeled by Langmuir, Freundlich and Dubinin–Radushkevich (D–R) isotherms. The Freundlich isotherm model ( R 2 = 0.98–0.99) fitted the equilibrium data better than the Langmuir and D–R isotherm models, with low sum of error values (SE = 1.4–9.2%). The mean adsorption free energy derived from the D–R isotherm model ( R 2 = 0.95–0.99) showed that the adsorption of drin pesticides was taken place by weak physical forces, such as van der Waals forces and hydrogen bonding. The calculated thermodynamic parameters, Δ H, Δ S and Δ G prove that drin pesticides adsorption on ATOS was feasible, spontaneous and exothermic under examined conditions. The pseudo first order, pseudo second order kinetic and the intra-particle diffusion models were used to describe the kinetic data and rate constants were evaluated.
ISSN:0960-8524
1873-2976
DOI:10.1016/j.biortech.2009.04.003