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Removal of chrome dye from aqueous solutions by fly ash

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TLDR
In this article, the ability of fly ash to remove Omega Chrome Red ME (a chrome dye, mostly used in textile industries) from water has been studied, and it has been found that low adsorbate concentration, small particle size of adsorbent, low temperature, and acidic pH of the medium favor the removal of chrome dye from aqueous solutions.
Abstract
The ability of fly ash to remove Omega Chrome Red ME (a chrome dye, mostly used in textile industries) from water has been studied. It has been found that low adsorbate concentration, small particle size of adsorbent, low temperature, and acidic pH of the medium favor the removal of chrome dye from aqueous solutions. The dynamics of adsorbate transport from bulk to the solid phase has been studied at different temperatures in light of the adsorption of dye on the outer surface as well as diffusion within the pores of fly ash. The applicability of Langmuir isotherm suggests the formation of monolayer coverage of dye molecules on the outer interface of adsorbent. The thermodynamics of chrome dye-fly ash system indicates spontaneous and exothermic nature of the process. The pronounced removal of chrome dye in the acidic range may be due to the association of dye anions with the positively charged surface of the adsorbent.

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Citations
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Pseudo-second order model for sorption processes

TL;DR: In this paper, a literature review of the use of sorbents and biosorbents to treat polluted aqueous effluents containing dyes:organics or metal ions has been conducted.
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A review on the utilization of fly ash

TL;DR: In this article, the utilization of fly ash in construction, as a low-cost adsorbent for the removal of organic compounds, flue gas and metals, light weight aggregate, mine back fill, road sub-base, and zeolite synthesis is discussed.
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Kinetics and mechanism of removal of methylene blue by adsorption on various carbons—a comparative study

TL;DR: In this article, the kinetics and mechanism of methylene blue adsorption on commercial activated carbon and indigenously prepared activated carbons from bamboo dust, coconut shell, groundnut shell, rice husk, and straw, have been studied.
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Kinetics of pollutant sorption by biosorbents: review

TL;DR: A review of the mechanisms of solute sorption onto various biosorbents has been performed in this article, where the mechanisms have been subdivided into reaction based systems and diffusion based systems, and the literature has been reviewed in accordance with these two groups.
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On the comparison of pseudo-first order and pseudo-second order rate laws in the modeling of adsorption kinetics

TL;DR: In this paper, a different method is proposed to analyze experimental results and it is employed here to reexamine experimental data taken from the literature, and it appears that the method generally used is flawed and that it unfairly favors pseudo-second order kinetics.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Copper(II) removal from aqueous solutions by fly ash

TL;DR: In this article, the removal of Cu(II) by adsorption on fly ash has been found to be concentration, pH and temperature dependent, indicating the process to be diffusion controlled.
Journal ArticleDOI

The removal of colour from effluent using various adsorbents—III. Silica: Rate processes

TL;DR: In this article, the rate of adsorption of Astrazone Blue, a basic dye, on Sorbsil Silica has been studied, where particle size, initial dye concentration, agitation and dye solution temperature were all considered.
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The Removal of Acid Dye from Effluent Using Natural Adsorbents. I. Peat.

TL;DR: In this paper, the adsorption of Telon Blue (Acid Blue 25) on peat has been investigated and the effects of contact time, initial dye concentration and peat particle size were studied.
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Adsorption of dyestuffs from aqueous solutions with activated carbon I: Equilibrium and batch contact-time studies

TL;DR: In this article, the ability of activated carbon to remove dyestuffs from aqueous solutions has been investigated, and several factors have been studied, namely, agitation, initial dye concentration, adsorbent concentration, ad-size range, dye solution temperature, pH of solution and salt concentration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface mass transfer processes during colour removal from effluent using silica

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of several variables on the initial rate of Astrazone Blue (Basic) dye removal have been investigated and the surface mass transfer coefficients have been determined and correlated as the dimensionless mass transfer term Sh/Sc 0.33, as a function of agitation, initial dye concentration, silica particle size and temperature.
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