Modified oil palm leaves adsorbent with enhanced hydrophobicity for crude oil removal

The removal of crude oil from water by lauric acid (LA) modified oil palm leaves (OPLsLA) was investigated by batch adsorption after varying pH (2–11), contact time (10–60 min), adsorbent dosage (0–52 g L−1), initial oil concentration (0–6400 mg L−1) and temperature (303–323 K). The modification sig...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sidik, Siti Munirah, Jalil, A. A., Triwahyono, S., Adam, S. H., Satar, M. A. H., Hameed, B. H.
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier Ltd. 2012
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/47244/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2012.06.132
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Summary:The removal of crude oil from water by lauric acid (LA) modified oil palm leaves (OPLsLA) was investigated by batch adsorption after varying pH (2–11), contact time (10–60 min), adsorbent dosage (0–52 g L−1), initial oil concentration (0–6400 mg L−1) and temperature (303–323 K). The modification significantly increased the hydrophobicity of the adsorbent, thus creating OPLLA with much better adsorption capacity for crude oil removal. The results gave the maximum adsorption capacity of 1176 ± 12.92 mg g−1 at 303 K. The significant uptake of crude oil from water was proven by FT-IR and FE-SEM analyses. The isotherms studies revealed that the experimental data agrees with the Freundlich isotherm model. The pseudo-second-order kinetics model fitted well the experimental results. Boyd’s and Reichenberg’s equation on adsorption dynamic revealed that the adsorption was controlled by internal transport mechanism and film-diffusion was the major mode of adsorption. The prepared adsorbent showed the potential to use as a low-cost adsorbent in oil-spill clean-up.