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Performance study on adsorptive removal of acetaminophen from wastewater using silica microspheres: Kinetic and isotherm studies

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Abstract Owing to the global industrialization, a new generation of pharmaceutical pollutants with high toxicity and persistency have been detected. In the present study, silica microspheres, a promising adsorbent has… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Owing to the global industrialization, a new generation of pharmaceutical pollutants with high toxicity and persistency have been detected. In the present study, silica microspheres, a promising adsorbent has been employed to investigate the extent of removal of prevalent therapeutic acetaminophen, an emerging micropollutant, from wastewater in isolated batch experiments. The BET surface area of the adsorbent was 105.46 m2/g with a pore size of 15 nm. Characterization of adsorbent by scanning electron microscopy analysis revealed the microparticulate nature with a 15 ± 5 μm particle size. Optimization of reaction parameters for enhanced assimilative removal of pollutants was performed and the highest adsorption of 96.7% of acetaminophen with an adsorption capacity of 89.0 mg/g was observed upon contact time of only 30 min. Mild process conditions of pH 5.0, 20 ppm of acetaminophen, temperature of 303 K, and 100 ppm sorbent concentration further aided in the removal process. Obtained data were best corresponded with the Freundlich isotherm (n = 2.685), indicating highly favorable adsorption. Acetaminophen adsorption kinetics obeyed the pseudo second order and feasible energetic changes were yielded through the thermodynamic analysis. Silica microspheres recovery carried out through a single-step desorption process had a 99.14% retrieval ability.

Keywords: wastewater; removal; study; adsorption; acetaminophen; silica microspheres

Journal Title: Chemosphere
Year Published: 2021

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