Carbon nanotubes from waste cooking palm oil as adsorbent materials for the adsorption of heavy metal ions

In this work, waste cooking palm oil (WCPO)-based carbon nanotubes (CNTs) with encapsulated iron (Fe) nanoparticles have been successfully produced via modified thermal chemical vapor deposition method. Based on several characterizations, the dense WCPO-based CNT was produced with high purity of 89%...

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Published in:Environmental Science and Pollution Research
Main Author: Abu Bakar S.; Jusoh N.; Mohamed A.; Muqoyyanah M.; Othman M.H.D.; Mamat M.H.; Ahmad M.K.; Mohamed M.A.; Azlan M.N.; Hashim N.; Birowosuto M.D.; Soga T.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH 2021
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85109320315&doi=10.1007%2fs11356-021-14918-y&partnerID=40&md5=fb397cad550f363a0ac1952cb7cf0724
id 2-s2.0-85109320315
spelling 2-s2.0-85109320315
Abu Bakar S.; Jusoh N.; Mohamed A.; Muqoyyanah M.; Othman M.H.D.; Mamat M.H.; Ahmad M.K.; Mohamed M.A.; Azlan M.N.; Hashim N.; Birowosuto M.D.; Soga T.
Carbon nanotubes from waste cooking palm oil as adsorbent materials for the adsorption of heavy metal ions
2021
Environmental Science and Pollution Research
28
46
10.1007/s11356-021-14918-y
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85109320315&doi=10.1007%2fs11356-021-14918-y&partnerID=40&md5=fb397cad550f363a0ac1952cb7cf0724
In this work, waste cooking palm oil (WCPO)-based carbon nanotubes (CNTs) with encapsulated iron (Fe) nanoparticles have been successfully produced via modified thermal chemical vapor deposition method. Based on several characterizations, the dense WCPO-based CNT was produced with high purity of 89% and high crystallinity proven by low ID/IG ratio (0.43). Moreover, the ferromagnetic response of CNTs showed that the average coercivity and magnetization saturation were found to be 551.5 Oe and 13.4 emu/g, respectively. These produced WCPO-based CNTs were further used as heavy metal ions adsorbent for wastewater treatment application. Some optimizations, such as the effect of different adsorbent dosage, varied initial pH solution, and various heavy metal ions, were investigated. The adsorption studies showed that the optimum adsorbent dosage was 1.8 g/L when it was applied to 100 mg/L Cu (II) solution at neutral pH (pH 7). Further measurement then showed that high Cu (II) ion removal percentage (~80%) was achieved when it was applied at very acidic solution (pH 2). Last measurement confirmed that the produced WCPO-based CNTs successfully removed different heavy metal ions in the following order: Fe (II) > Zn (II) ≈ Cu (II) with the removal percentage in the range of 99.2 to 99.9%. The adsorption isotherm for Cu (II) was better fitted by Langmuir model with a correlation coefficient of 0.82751. WCPO-based CNTs can be a potential material to be applied as adsorbent in heavy metal ion removal. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
9441344
English
Article

author Abu Bakar S.; Jusoh N.; Mohamed A.; Muqoyyanah M.; Othman M.H.D.; Mamat M.H.; Ahmad M.K.; Mohamed M.A.; Azlan M.N.; Hashim N.; Birowosuto M.D.; Soga T.
spellingShingle Abu Bakar S.; Jusoh N.; Mohamed A.; Muqoyyanah M.; Othman M.H.D.; Mamat M.H.; Ahmad M.K.; Mohamed M.A.; Azlan M.N.; Hashim N.; Birowosuto M.D.; Soga T.
Carbon nanotubes from waste cooking palm oil as adsorbent materials for the adsorption of heavy metal ions
author_facet Abu Bakar S.; Jusoh N.; Mohamed A.; Muqoyyanah M.; Othman M.H.D.; Mamat M.H.; Ahmad M.K.; Mohamed M.A.; Azlan M.N.; Hashim N.; Birowosuto M.D.; Soga T.
author_sort Abu Bakar S.; Jusoh N.; Mohamed A.; Muqoyyanah M.; Othman M.H.D.; Mamat M.H.; Ahmad M.K.; Mohamed M.A.; Azlan M.N.; Hashim N.; Birowosuto M.D.; Soga T.
title Carbon nanotubes from waste cooking palm oil as adsorbent materials for the adsorption of heavy metal ions
title_short Carbon nanotubes from waste cooking palm oil as adsorbent materials for the adsorption of heavy metal ions
title_full Carbon nanotubes from waste cooking palm oil as adsorbent materials for the adsorption of heavy metal ions
title_fullStr Carbon nanotubes from waste cooking palm oil as adsorbent materials for the adsorption of heavy metal ions
title_full_unstemmed Carbon nanotubes from waste cooking palm oil as adsorbent materials for the adsorption of heavy metal ions
title_sort Carbon nanotubes from waste cooking palm oil as adsorbent materials for the adsorption of heavy metal ions
publishDate 2021
container_title Environmental Science and Pollution Research
container_volume 28
container_issue 46
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s11356-021-14918-y
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85109320315&doi=10.1007%2fs11356-021-14918-y&partnerID=40&md5=fb397cad550f363a0ac1952cb7cf0724
description In this work, waste cooking palm oil (WCPO)-based carbon nanotubes (CNTs) with encapsulated iron (Fe) nanoparticles have been successfully produced via modified thermal chemical vapor deposition method. Based on several characterizations, the dense WCPO-based CNT was produced with high purity of 89% and high crystallinity proven by low ID/IG ratio (0.43). Moreover, the ferromagnetic response of CNTs showed that the average coercivity and magnetization saturation were found to be 551.5 Oe and 13.4 emu/g, respectively. These produced WCPO-based CNTs were further used as heavy metal ions adsorbent for wastewater treatment application. Some optimizations, such as the effect of different adsorbent dosage, varied initial pH solution, and various heavy metal ions, were investigated. The adsorption studies showed that the optimum adsorbent dosage was 1.8 g/L when it was applied to 100 mg/L Cu (II) solution at neutral pH (pH 7). Further measurement then showed that high Cu (II) ion removal percentage (~80%) was achieved when it was applied at very acidic solution (pH 2). Last measurement confirmed that the produced WCPO-based CNTs successfully removed different heavy metal ions in the following order: Fe (II) > Zn (II) ≈ Cu (II) with the removal percentage in the range of 99.2 to 99.9%. The adsorption isotherm for Cu (II) was better fitted by Langmuir model with a correlation coefficient of 0.82751. WCPO-based CNTs can be a potential material to be applied as adsorbent in heavy metal ion removal. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
publisher Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
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language English
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