Facile synthesis and characterization of multi-walled carbon nanotubes decorated with hydroxyapatite from cattle horns for adsorptive removal of fluoride

Article Authors: Ojok, W., P Bolender, J., Wasswa, J., Ntambi, E., Wanasolo, W., & Moodley, B. (2023).

Abstract


ABSTRACT
Developing a new adsorbent for fluoride removal from cattle horn waste materials by a facile chemical method has shown great potential for fluoride removal. This paper reports the synthesis of multi-walled carbon nanotubes decorated with hydroxyapatite from cattle horns (MWCNT-CH)
using a facile chemical method. Characterization studies using standard techniques showed that the composite is mesoporous with a rough morphology and contained MWCNTs uniformly encapsulated by the hydroxyapatite forming a crystalline MWCNT-CH composite. Optimization of fluoride adsorption by the as-synthesized composite using Response Surface Methodology (RSM) showed that a maximum fluoride removal efficiency of 80.21% can be attained at initial fluoride concentration = 10 mg/L, pH = 5.25, adsorbent dose = 0.5 g and a contact time of 78 min. ANOVA indicates contribution of the process variables in descending order as pH > contact time > adsorbent dose > initial fluoride concentration. Langmuir isotherm (R2 = 0.9991) best
described the process, and the maximum adsorption capacity of fluoride onto the as-synthesized MWCNT-CH composite was 41.7 mg/g. Adsorption kinetics data were best fitted in the pseudosecond-order kinetic model (R2 = 0.9969), indicating chemisorption. The thermodynamic parameter (Δ H = 13.95 J/mol and Δ S = 65.76 J/mol/K) showed that fluoride adsorption onto the MWCNT-CH composite was a spontaneous, endothermic, and entropy-driving process. Moreover, the adsorption mechanism involves ion exchange, electrostatic interaction, and hydrogen bonding. Fluoride was successfully desorbed (using 0.1 M NaOH) from the composite in four cycles, retaining fluoride removal efficiency in the fourth cycle of 57.3%.

Bibliographical metadata

Journal Heliyon
Volume 9
Issue No. 3
Pages 14341
Links https://www.cell.com/heliyon/pdf/S2405-8440(23)01548-7.pdf
Related Faculties/Schools
Affiliation
  1. Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Mbarara University of Science and Technology, P.O Box 1410, Mbarara, Uganda
  2. Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Muni University, P.O Box 725, Arua, Uganda
  3. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of San Diego, 5998 Alcala Park, San Diego, CA 92110, USA
  4. Department of Chemistry, College of Natural Sciences, Makerere University, P.O Box 7062, Kampala, Uganda
  5. Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Kyambogo University, P.O Box 1 Kyambogo, Kampala, Uganda
  6. School of Chemistry and Physics, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Westville Campus, Durban, 4000, South Africa