Separation Science and Technology, Vol.47, No.13, 1937-1947, 2012
Development of Functional Adsorbent From Textile Cotton Waste by Radiation Induced Grafting Process: Equilibrium and Kinetic Studies of Acid Dye Adsorption
An environment benign-aqueous solvent based-single step-radiation induced grafting process was used to graft Poly(vinylbenzyltrimethyl ammonium) chloride (PVBT) onto cellulosic cotton textile waste to transform it into a valuable cationic adsorbent (PVBT-g-Cellulose). The PVBT-g-Cellulose adsorbent was characterized by grafting yield determination, elemental analysis, scanning electron microscope (SEM), and fourier transformed infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. The PVBT-g-Cellulose adsorbent, investigated for the removal of model dyes from manufactured solutions, exhibited equilibrium adsorption capacities of similar to 540 mg/g, similar to 474 mg/g, and similar to 122 mg/g for acid blue 25(AB25), acid yellow 99(AY99), and acid blue 74(AB74), respectively. The degree of agreement between the adsorption isotherm models and experimental data followed the order: Langmuir-Freundlich>Redlich-Peterson>Langmuir> Freundlich. The kinetic adsorption data was found to be in close agreement with pseudo-second order kinetic model. The elution percentage of as high as similar to 95% could be achieved for AB25 using a suitable eluent.
Keywords:acid dyes;adsorption;adsorption isotherms;poly-vinylbenzyltrimethylammonium chloride;radiation grafting