Removal of the antibiotic metronidazole by adsorption on various carbon materials from aqueous phase
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The adsorption of the antibiotic metronidazole (MNZ) on activated carbon (F400), activated carbon cloth (ACF), mesoporous activated carbon (CMK-3), and carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) was investigated in this work. The effect of the adsorbent-adsorbate interactions as well as the operating conditions (ionic strength, solution pH, temperature, chemical modification of the adsorbents by HNO3 treatment, and water matrix) on the adsorption capacity were analyzed to substantiate the adsorption mechanism. The adsorption capacity markedly varied as function of the carbon material, decreasing in the following order: F400>ACF>F400-HNO3>CMK-3>MWCNT>MWCNT-HNO3, and depended not only on their surface area and pore size distribution, but also on their chemical nature. The adsorption of MNZ was influenced by the solution pH, but was not significantly affected by the ionic strength and temperature. The adsorption of MNZ was enhanced when the MNZ solutions were prepared using wastewater. Therefore, the electrolytes present in the wastewater cooperated rather than competed with the MNZ molecules for the adsorption sites. Desorption equilibrium data of MNZ on all carbon materials demonstrated that the adsorption was reversible corroborating the weakness of the adsorbent-adsorbate interactions. © 2014 Elsevier Inc.
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Adsorption; Antibiotic metronidazole; Carbon materials; Removal Removal; Aqueous phase; Carbon material; Metronidazole; Adsorption; activated carbon; adsorbent; metronidazole; multi walled nanotube; water; antiinfective agent; carbon; metronidazole; adsorption; algorithm; aqueous solution; Article; chemical modification; concentration (parameters); density functional theory; desorption; drug solubility; hysteresis; ionic strength; isotherm; molecular size; molecular weight; particle size; pH; pressure; reduction; surface property; temperature; waste water; water quality; adsorption; chemistry; isolation and purification; Adsorption; Anti-Infective Agents; Carbon; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Metronidazole; Water
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