Performance of zinc removal by durian shell
Abstract
The durian shell is introduced as a new adsorbent for the removal of heavy metal
from the aqueous solution. Various parameters, including pH (2-8), initial solution
concentration (10-80 mg L-1), temperature (20-80 °C) and adsorbent dosage (0.01-0.08
g), were used to study the effects on durian shells biosorption. The results showed that
the adsorption process took place well in alkaline condition with optimum pH 8. The
adsorption rate decreased when the temperature increased. The adsorption is favoured
with increase in adsorbent dosage and initial dye concentration. However the percentage
of removal decreased once the amount of dosage reaches more than 0.6 g. The
equilibrium data fitted better in Langmuir model, although it also can fit into Freundlich
model demonstrating that the adsorption occurs at heterogeneous sites and multilayer
biosorption. The maximum monolayer biosorption capacity was 78.71076 mg/g with
the degree of adsorption 27.33 mg/g. The adsorption process followed the pseudosecond
order kinetic model showing chemisorption was involved during adsorption
process.