A new kinetic and thermodynamic approach to phenol biosorption by chitosan and keratin

Attilio Converti1, Milena Nakagawa2,3, Gisele Pigatto1,2,3, Alessandra Lodi1, Bronislaw Polakiewicz2,3, Saleh Al Arni4, Elisabetta Finocchio1, Mauri S rgio Alves Palma2,3

1 Department of Civil, Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of Genoa, Pole of Chemical Engineering, Via Opera Pia 15, I-16145, Genoa, Italy
2 Department of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Technology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, S o Paulo University, Av. Prof Lineu Prestes, 580, Bl 16, 05508-900, S o Paulo, Brazil
3 Department of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Technology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, S o Paulo University, Av. Prof Lineu Prestes, 580, Bl 16, 05508-900, S o Paulo, Brazil
4 Department of Chemical Engineering, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Abstract


Chitosan and keratin were tested as low cost biosorbents to remove phenol from water solutions at variable temperature (2050 C), initial phenol concentration (10-90 mg L-1) and pH (5.0-10.0), and fixed biosorbent dosage (10 g L-1). The pseudo-second order kinetic model exhibited the best fit to the experimental data and allowed estimating theoretical values of sorption capacity of 4.51 mg g-1 with keratin and 2.87 mg g-1 with chitosan. Equilibrium isotherms, described at best by the Freundlich model, pointed out that keratin (KF = 1.34 mg1-1/n L1/n g-1) was more effective than chitosan (KF = 0.19 mg1-1/n L1/n g-1) in phenol removal, although the sorption intensity was almost coincident (n = 1.18-1.19). The results of tests performed at different temperatures suggested a novel thermodynamic approach based on the occurrence of a sorbent inactivation equilibrium, whose changes of enthalpy and entropy were estimated to be 35.7 kJ mol-1 and 118 J mol-1 K-1 with chitosan, and 256 kJ mol-1 and 845 J mol-1 K-1 with keratin. The main functional groups involved in phenol sorption by both raw and phenol-bound materials were identified by FT-IR spectroscopy.

Keywords


biosorption; chitosan; keratin; phenol; thermodynamics

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