Biosorption of Zinc (II) ions from aqueous solution by Mango seeds
Abstract
Contamination of water by heavy metals threatens the well-being of humans and the
natural environment. The need for a cost-effective and efficient method for the metal
ions removal has led researchers to develop interest in biomass that can be used as
adsorbent to accumulate the toxic metals. This research was conducted to determine the
potential of the waste biomass of Mangifera indica seed as low cost biosorbent in
binding with the zinc (II) ions present in the aqueous solution. Research was carried out
by testing the sorption capabilities of the pH, the biosorbent dosage, the contact time,
and the concentration of zinc metal variation. The mango seeds biosorbent was found
effective in zinc ion removal where the maximum sorption capacity could reach 57.03
mg/g and the maximum percentage removal was 89.25%. The optimum condition for
the biosorption to occur were at pH 6 with sorption capacity of 55.08 mg/g, 50 mg/L of
initial zinc ion concentration with sorption capacity of 55.49 mg/g and 0.1 g biosorbent
dosage that obtained 54.53 mg/g of sorption. The sorption process of the zinc ions onto
the mango seeds biosorbent obeyed Pseudo-Second with linearity of 0.9692 while the
adsorption followed the Langmuir isotherm with linearity 0.9986 implied that
chemisorption took place with monolayer sorption process. Fourier Transformed
Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) technique was used to characterize the mango seed
biosorbent. FTIR analysis shown that phenolic (–O–H) group, primary amines (–N–H)
group and aliphatic amines (–C–N) group interact with the zinc metal ions. The
experiments result revealed that biosorbent derived from mango seeds represent an
attractive candidate to remove zinc metal ions.