TY - JOUR
T1 - A sustainable and highly efficient fossil-free carbon from olive stones for emerging contaminants removal from different water matrices
AU - Al-sareji, Osamah J.
AU - Grmasha, Ruqayah Ali
AU - Meiczinger, Mónika
AU - Al-Juboori, Raed A.
AU - Somogyi, Viola
AU - Stenger-Kovács, Csilla
AU - Hashim, Khalid S.
N1 - Funding Information:
The ÚNKP-23-3-II-PE-12 (Osamah J. Al-sareji) New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Culture and Innovation from the source of the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund supported this research.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - The olive stone is a large waste product of the olive oil extraction industry. The present study investigates developing activated carbon from olive stone waste (OSAC) to remove pharmaceuticals from water. Different temperatures and olive stone: KOH ratios were studied. The OSAC produced at 750 °C and 1:3 ratio was found to have the highest porosity and surface area and was tested in the adsorption process. Diclofenac and ciprofloxacin were selected as model contaminants. The adsorption process was optimized with regards to OSAC dosage, pH, temperature, and initial concentration of adsorbate. The OSAC was found to be effective for a wide pH range (2–11) with an optimum dosage of 1 g/L at 25 °C. The pharmaceuticals were almost completely removed in 75 min. The adsorption was endothermic and followed first-order kinetics with physical mechanisms such as electrostatic possibly being the main driver. The optimum conditions were applied to test the removal of diclofenac and ciprofloxacin in synthetic water, lake water (Lake Balaton, Hungary) and secondary wastewater for seven cycles. There was little difference between the removal of the tested water matrices highlighting the potency of OSAC as an adsorbent for pharmaceutical removal in industrial applications. The removal dropped from >99% for the first cycle to 20–30% for the seventh cycle.
AB - The olive stone is a large waste product of the olive oil extraction industry. The present study investigates developing activated carbon from olive stone waste (OSAC) to remove pharmaceuticals from water. Different temperatures and olive stone: KOH ratios were studied. The OSAC produced at 750 °C and 1:3 ratio was found to have the highest porosity and surface area and was tested in the adsorption process. Diclofenac and ciprofloxacin were selected as model contaminants. The adsorption process was optimized with regards to OSAC dosage, pH, temperature, and initial concentration of adsorbate. The OSAC was found to be effective for a wide pH range (2–11) with an optimum dosage of 1 g/L at 25 °C. The pharmaceuticals were almost completely removed in 75 min. The adsorption was endothermic and followed first-order kinetics with physical mechanisms such as electrostatic possibly being the main driver. The optimum conditions were applied to test the removal of diclofenac and ciprofloxacin in synthetic water, lake water (Lake Balaton, Hungary) and secondary wastewater for seven cycles. There was little difference between the removal of the tested water matrices highlighting the potency of OSAC as an adsorbent for pharmaceutical removal in industrial applications. The removal dropped from >99% for the first cycle to 20–30% for the seventh cycle.
KW - Activated carbon
KW - Agricultural by-products
KW - Biochar
KW - Ciprofloxacin
KW - Diclofenac
KW - Waste
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85182511313&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.141189
DO - 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.141189
M3 - Article
C2 - 38211782
AN - SCOPUS:85182511313
SN - 0045-6535
VL - 351
JO - Chemosphere
JF - Chemosphere
M1 - 141189
ER -