Abstract:
Over the past few years, the quality of water is of very important concern for living
beings as well prevailing flora and fauna since it has direct connection with the human welfare
and ecosystem. Numerous unwanted and noxious impurities are discharged in to the aquatic
ecosystem, which directly affects the aquatic food chain. The major sources of water pollution
are domestic waste from urban, rural areas and industries wastes which discharged directly into
the nearby aquatic streams. The large number of water pollutants includes organic and
inorganic pollutants, sediments, radioactive materials and thermal pollutants. Once they come
into our body, they perturb our biochemical processes leading to deadly consequences. Several
techniques like electrochemical oxidation and sensors, sorption, chemical coagulation, solvent
extraction, bioremediation, photo catalytic degradation and adsorption were reported for the
removal of noxious impurities from polluted aquatic source, but among all the adsorption was
proved to be the most economical and efficient method for the removal of noxious inorganic
and organic impurities from aqueous solution, it has been extensively applied because it is a
simple and cost effective technique and low cost adsorbents, these adsorbents are particularly
attractive to current researchers due to its potential applications in the wastewater treatment,
wastewater management and environmental research areas. The research and development
(R&D) in the field of wastewater treatment and wastewater management has expanded
exponentially in terms of financial investment, numbers of paper published, and the number of
active researchers worldwide. Hence for the remediation of aquatic sources we designed
efficient and excellent adsorbents, which lead to rapid removal and fast adsorption of these
noxious inorganic and organic impurities.
The main objective of the present work is to convert waste products, nanoparticles and
surface hydrogels in to novel adsorbents for the removal of noxious inorganic contaminants i.e.
Ni2+, As(III) and As(V) and organic contaminants i.e. Phenols and its derivatives and noxious
dyes like Acid Blue 129 (AB 129), Congo Red (CR) and Malachite green (MG) from the
solvent phase. The results of these investigations are incorporated in the present thesis; a
chapter wise summary of the thesis content is discussed below:
In Chapter 1, a general introduction and a survey of novel, low cost and potential
adsorbents reported in the literature, various types of water pollutants i.e. heavy metals, dyes,
pesticides, biological agents and dissolved and non-dissolved solids are well investigated and
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reported in this chapter. This chapter also summarised the different sources of the adsorbents
i.e. Silica gel, Zeolites and ion exchange resins and activated carbon prepared from various
sources i.e. rubber tire, lignin, fly ash, bagasse ash etc are well elucidated and presented. The
chapter finally concludes with the scope and objective of the research work undertaken.
In Chapter 2, the theory which involve during the adsorption phenomenon of various
noxious impurities is described. Details related to the adsorption isotherms and kinetics will be
discussed in the different subsections. Several adsorption isotherm models i.e. Langmuir and its
types such as Type 1, 2, 3, and 4, Fruendlich, Temkin and Dubinin-Raduskevich etc,
additionally various kinetics model such as Pseudo-first-order, Pseudo-second order and
Intraparticle-diffusion etc are well investigated and discussed in this chapter. Various analytical
characterization techniques and adsorbent preparation methods have also been discussed in this
chapter.
In Chapter 3, the potential of scrap tire as adsorbent for the rapid removal of Ni2+ from
the aqueous source is presented. The developed adsorbent is well characterized using SEM,
EDAX and FT-IR. The activated carbon prepared showed porous morphology and favorable
surface chemistry for binding to Ni2+. Batch adsorption method is used for the optimization of
influential parameters such as adsorbent dose, pH, contact time and temperature, the obtained
optimized data reveals that a 0.5 g/L adsorbent dose was found to be optimum at a pH of 7,
contact time of 50 min and temperature of 55 °C for achieving ≥95% Ni2+ removal from
synthetic solution containing 0.1 ppm Ni2+ concentration. Thermodynamic studies revealed the
feasibility and endothermic nature of the system. The results of the present study suggest that
scrap tire can be used beneficially for Ni2+ removal from aqueous solution.
In Chapter 4, waste tire rubber derived activated carbon-alumina composites (ACALs)
and Tire rubber alumina composite (TRAL) were used as efficient adsorbent for the rapid
removal of As (III) and As (V). The developed adsorbents i.e. activated carbon-alumina
composites were synthesized through two-steps pyrolytic technique at 700ºC in the presence of
N2 gas along with steam and characterized using FE-SEM, EDX and FT-IR. Ratio metric
preparation of the activated carbon-alumina composites was carried out using activated carbon
and aluminium hydroxide in 1:1 ratio by weight i.e. activated carbon-alumina composites
(ACAL) 11, and 1:2 ratio by weight i.e. activated carbon-alumina composites (ACAL) 12 and
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2:1 ratio by weight i.e. activated carbon-alumina composites (ACAL) 21. Though TRAL has
greater BET surface area, its adsorptive capacity towards arsenic in aqueous solution is lower
than that of ACAL11. Further, TRAL contains sulphur derived from tire rubber but ACAL11 is
free of sulphur as it is prepared from AC-HCl which is free from sulphur as well as other acid
soluble impurities. Adsorption of As(III) as well as As(V) on ACAL11 and TRAL are best
fitted to Langmuir adsorption isotherm with pseudo-second order kinetics.
In Chapter 5, the Rubber tire activated carbon modification (RTACMC) and rubber tire
activated carbon (RTAC) were prepared from waste rubber tire by microwave assisted
chemical treatment and physical heating respectively. A greater improvement in porosity and
total pore volume was achieved in RTACMC as compared to that of RTAC. But both have a
predominantly mesoporous structure. Under identical operating conditions, an irradiation time
of 10 min, chemical impregnation ratio of 1.50 and a microwave power of 600W resulted in
maximizing the efficiency of RTACMC for p-cresol (250 mg/g) at a contact time of 90 min
while RTAC showed a 71.43 mg/g adsorption capacity at 150 min. Phenol, due to its higher
solubility was adsorbed to a lesser extent by both adsorbents. Physical nature of interactions,
pore diffusion mechanism and exothermic nature of the adsorption process was operative in
both adsorbents. The outcomes support the feasibility of preparing high quality activated
carbon from waste rubber tire by microwave assisted chemical activation.
In Chapter 6, a novel adsorbent, copper oxide nanoparticle loaded on activated carbon
(CuO-NP-AC) was synthesized by a simple, low cost and efficient procedure. Subsequently,
this novel sorbent was characterized and identified using different techniques such as scanning
electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and laser light scattering (LLS). The
effects of some variables including pH, adsorbent dosage, initial dye concentration, contact
time and temperature were examined and optimized. The adsorption kinetic data were modelled
using the pseudo-first-order, pseudo-second order, intraparticle diffusion and Elovich models,
respectively.
In Chapter 7, applications of compounds like 2-Hydroxyethylmethacrylate (HEMA),
2-Hydroxyethyl methacrylate–ethoxy ethyl methacrylate–methacrylic acid (HEMA–EEMA–
MA), and Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) as an adsorbent for the removal of two hazardous toxic azo
dyes i.e. Malachite green (MG) and Congo red (CR) from aqueous solutions were well
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explained and elucidated. The adsorbents under consideration were synthesized and
characterized by using SEM, and ATR-FTIR. The dye removal depends on the pH of the
solution, the optimum pH for this experimentation was found to be 9. The adsorption affinity of
MG onto HEMA–EEMA–MA was increased from 245 to 330 mg/g > CR onto PVA 169–236
mg/g > MG onto HEMA 130–205 mg/g > CR onto HEMA–EEMA–MA 90–155mg/g > MG
onto PVA 35–140mg/g > CR onto HEMA 17–57 mg/g, respectively.