Bi-metal biosorption using Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS) as a biosorbent: isotherm, kinetic, thermodynamic studies and mechanism

The bi-metal biosorption of Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS), a novel agriculture waste from solid substrate fermentation for mushroom production, was explored in this study. The biosorption of Cu(II) and Ni(II) in bi-metal solution using PSMS were examined under batch biosorption...

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Published in:Desalination and Water Treatment
Main Author: Tay C.-C.; Liew H.-H.; Abdul-Talib S.; Redzwan G.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis Inc. 2016
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84957844093&doi=10.1080%2f19443994.2015.1027957&partnerID=40&md5=5ea0d1236745a56002201f5da93911ca
id 2-s2.0-84957844093
spelling 2-s2.0-84957844093
Tay C.-C.; Liew H.-H.; Abdul-Talib S.; Redzwan G.
Bi-metal biosorption using Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS) as a biosorbent: isotherm, kinetic, thermodynamic studies and mechanism
2016
Desalination and Water Treatment
57
20
10.1080/19443994.2015.1027957
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84957844093&doi=10.1080%2f19443994.2015.1027957&partnerID=40&md5=5ea0d1236745a56002201f5da93911ca
The bi-metal biosorption of Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS), a novel agriculture waste from solid substrate fermentation for mushroom production, was explored in this study. The biosorption of Cu(II) and Ni(II) in bi-metal solution using PSMS were examined under batch biosorption technique. Determination of metal biosorption was evaluated through isotherm, kinetic and thermodynamic studies in order to elucidate the mechanisms of metal biosorption. Metal biosorption results were well corresponded to Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms. The maximum uptakes were 3.54 mg/g Cu(II) and 1.85 mg/g Ni(II) for bi-metal solution. However, this PSMS biosorbent has higher selectivity to Ni(II) when compared to Cu(II). The mean energy indicated that chemisorption involved in metals biosorption. Biosorption data were superbly fitted to pseudo-second-order kinetic when compared to pseudo-first-order kinetic. The results from the pseudo-second-order kinetic also implied that chemisorption plays a major role in biosorption process. Thermodynamic parameters showed that biosorption reaction was spontaneous and exothermic. Furthermore, a weaker and reversible bond formed after biosorption, which provided evidence that chemisorption is one of the mechanisms in biosorption. The ion exchange mechanism was evaluated through ICP-OES metals concentration and pH observation. In conclusion, the high metal biosorption uptake of PSMS indicates that it is a potential biosorbent for metal removal from waste streams. The findings revealed that both chemisorption and ion exchange were the two main mechanisms involved in spontaneous exothermic reversible metal biosorption process. This piece of information provides insight into application of biosorption of PSMC in real wastewater sample. © 2015 Balaban Desalination Publications. All rights reserved.
Taylor and Francis Inc.
19443994
English
Article

author Tay C.-C.; Liew H.-H.; Abdul-Talib S.; Redzwan G.
spellingShingle Tay C.-C.; Liew H.-H.; Abdul-Talib S.; Redzwan G.
Bi-metal biosorption using Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS) as a biosorbent: isotherm, kinetic, thermodynamic studies and mechanism
author_facet Tay C.-C.; Liew H.-H.; Abdul-Talib S.; Redzwan G.
author_sort Tay C.-C.; Liew H.-H.; Abdul-Talib S.; Redzwan G.
title Bi-metal biosorption using Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS) as a biosorbent: isotherm, kinetic, thermodynamic studies and mechanism
title_short Bi-metal biosorption using Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS) as a biosorbent: isotherm, kinetic, thermodynamic studies and mechanism
title_full Bi-metal biosorption using Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS) as a biosorbent: isotherm, kinetic, thermodynamic studies and mechanism
title_fullStr Bi-metal biosorption using Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS) as a biosorbent: isotherm, kinetic, thermodynamic studies and mechanism
title_full_unstemmed Bi-metal biosorption using Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS) as a biosorbent: isotherm, kinetic, thermodynamic studies and mechanism
title_sort Bi-metal biosorption using Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS) as a biosorbent: isotherm, kinetic, thermodynamic studies and mechanism
publishDate 2016
container_title Desalination and Water Treatment
container_volume 57
container_issue 20
doi_str_mv 10.1080/19443994.2015.1027957
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84957844093&doi=10.1080%2f19443994.2015.1027957&partnerID=40&md5=5ea0d1236745a56002201f5da93911ca
description The bi-metal biosorption of Pleurotus ostreatus spent mushroom substrate (PSMS), a novel agriculture waste from solid substrate fermentation for mushroom production, was explored in this study. The biosorption of Cu(II) and Ni(II) in bi-metal solution using PSMS were examined under batch biosorption technique. Determination of metal biosorption was evaluated through isotherm, kinetic and thermodynamic studies in order to elucidate the mechanisms of metal biosorption. Metal biosorption results were well corresponded to Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms. The maximum uptakes were 3.54 mg/g Cu(II) and 1.85 mg/g Ni(II) for bi-metal solution. However, this PSMS biosorbent has higher selectivity to Ni(II) when compared to Cu(II). The mean energy indicated that chemisorption involved in metals biosorption. Biosorption data were superbly fitted to pseudo-second-order kinetic when compared to pseudo-first-order kinetic. The results from the pseudo-second-order kinetic also implied that chemisorption plays a major role in biosorption process. Thermodynamic parameters showed that biosorption reaction was spontaneous and exothermic. Furthermore, a weaker and reversible bond formed after biosorption, which provided evidence that chemisorption is one of the mechanisms in biosorption. The ion exchange mechanism was evaluated through ICP-OES metals concentration and pH observation. In conclusion, the high metal biosorption uptake of PSMS indicates that it is a potential biosorbent for metal removal from waste streams. The findings revealed that both chemisorption and ion exchange were the two main mechanisms involved in spontaneous exothermic reversible metal biosorption process. This piece of information provides insight into application of biosorption of PSMC in real wastewater sample. © 2015 Balaban Desalination Publications. All rights reserved.
publisher Taylor and Francis Inc.
issn 19443994
language English
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