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Sustainable Adsorbents from Plant-Derived Agricultural Wastes for Anionic Dye Removal: A Review

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-19, 22:50 authored by Abu Naser Md Ahsanul HaqueAbu Naser Md Ahsanul Haque, N Sultana, ASM Sayem, SA Smriti
The extensive use of dyes in numerous industries results in massive dye discharge in the wastewater, which is a major cause of water pollution. Globally, the consumption of dyes is near seven hundred thousand tons across different sectors, of which around 10–15% goes into the wastewater. Among the dye kinds, anionic dyes make up the main proportion, having a 32–90% share in the wastewater. Different plant-derived wastes, which are sustainable given their natural abundance, effectiveness, and low cost, are frequently proposed for dye separation. However, these adsorbents are inherently more suitable for cationic dyes than anionic dyes. In recent years, the modification of these wastes has been progressively considered to suit them to anionic dye removal. These modifications involve mechanical, thermal, or chemical treatments, or combinations. These attempts propose two-way benefits, as one abundant waste is being used to cure another severe problem, and eventually both could be diminished. This review has a key focus on the evaluation of plant-derived adsorbents and their modifications, and particularly for anionic dye adsorption. Overall, the mechanism of adsorption and the suitability of the current methods are discussed, and their future potential is explored.

History

Journal

Sustainability (Switzerland)

Volume

14

Article number

ARTN 11098

ISSN

2071-1050

eISSN

2071-1050

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

17

Publisher

MDPI