SYNTHESIS OF HYDROCHAR FROM JACKFRUIT
20200299596 ยท 2020-09-24
Inventors
- MOONIS ALI KHAN (Riyadh, SA)
- Ayoub Abdullah Alqadami (Riyadh, SA)
- Masoom Raza SIDDIQUI (Riyadh, SA)
- Zeid Abdullah Alothman (Riyadh, SA)
Cpc classification
C10L5/447
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02E50/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y02E50/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A method of producing hydrochar from jackfruit peel biomass includes hydrothermal carbonization of jackfruit peel biomass by autoclaving at 150 C.-250 C. for about 3 hours to produce a hydrochar. The hydrochar can be activated by treatment with phosphoric acid (H.sub.3PO.sub.4), hydrogen peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2), or a combination thereof. The hydrochar produced according to the method is particularly effective at removing azo-dyes, and specifically methylene blue, from aqueous solutions such as industrial waste water.
Claims
1-17. (canceled)
18. A method of removing methylene blue from an aqueous environment, comprising contacting the hydrochar of jackfruit peel with the aqueous environment, wherein the hydrochar of jackfruit peel is produced by steps comprising: adding a jackfruit peel biomass to a liquid carrier; subjecting the jackfruit peel biomass in the liquid carrier to hydrothermal carbonization to provide a hydrochar, the hydrothermal carbonization comprising heating the jackfruit peel biomass in the liquid carrier to a temperature ranging from 150 C. to 250 C. for a period of time of 3 hours to provide the hydrochar; and separating the hydrochar from the liquid carrier.
19. The method of claim 1, wherein the hydrochar is incubated in the aqueous environment for about 24 hours.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024] Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0025] A method of synthesizing jackfruit hydrochar (JFHC) from jackfruit peel includes subjecting jackfruit peel to hydrothermal carbonization (HTC) to provide an initial JFHC. Preferably the jackfruit peel is dried and pulverized before being subjected to HTC. The method of synthesizing JFHC may further include an activation step to optimize the initial JFHC as an effective adsorbent for cations, such as methylene blue (MB), from aqueous environments.
[0026] The step of HTC may be performed at a temperature ranging from about 150 C. to about 300 C., e.g., 150 C. to about 250 C. for a set reaction time. The reaction time can range from about 30 min to about 24 hours. According to an embodiment, the HTC is performed at a temperature of about 150 C. for about 3 hours. Activation of the initial JFHC may include treatment with an activating compound, such as phosphoric acid (H.sub.3PO.sub.4, PA), hydrogen peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2, HP), or both. Exemplary chemical conditions for activating the initial JFHC can include treatment with 0.1 N phosphoric acid (H.sub.3PO.sub.4, PA) or, alternatively, 10% hydrogen peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2, HP). The chemically activated JFHC sample can then be separated using any suitable method, e.g., filtration or centrifugation. For example, filtration can be conducted using Whatman filter paper 41. JFHC produced according to the presently disclosed methods effectively adsorbs MB from an aqueous environment.
[0027] A method of removing MB from an aqueous environment can include contacting the activated JFHC with the aqueous environment.
[0028] As used herein, the term about when modifying a numerical value shall mean within 10% of the modified numerical value.
[0029] As described herein, an exemplary JFHC sample exhibiting maximal MB removal efficiency was prepared by subjecting jackfruit peel biomass to hydrothermal carbonization at 150 C. for 3 h to provide JFHC, and chemical activation of JFHC with 0.1N PA to provide an activated JFHC, referred to hereinafter as JFHC@150/3_PA. Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) analysis confirmed that phosphate (PO.sub.4.sup.3) groups were covalently attached with hydroxyl (OH) groups during chemical activation of the JFHC@150/3_PA. The adherence of PO.sub.4.sup.3 group with JFHC@150/3_PA during chemical activation was further confirmed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), which revealed the presence of a spectral peak at 133.7 eV, characteristic of P2p. After MB adsorption on JFHC@150/3_PA, as described herein, spectral peaks observed at 401 and 163 eV, attributed to N1 s and S2p, confirmed successful adsorption of MB on JFHC@150/3_PA. Morphologically, a surface of pristine JFHC@150/3_PA appeared uneven and porous prior to MB adsorption. Following MB adsorption, the surface of JFHC@150/3_PA appeared less porous, presumably due to occupation of pores with MB molecules. A total of 78% weight loss of the JFHC@150/3_PA sample for a temperature ranging from 30 C.-750 C. was observed during thermogravimetric analysis (see
[0030] Maximum MB adsorption (214.7 mg/g) on JFHC@150/3_PA was observed for an initial pH (pH.sub.i) of 7.24. The MB adsorption capacity decreased and % adsorption increased with an increase in JFHC@150/3_PA dose. The contact time study at varied MB concentration C.sub.o from 25 mg/L-100 mg/L revealed an increase in adsorption capacity from 80.8 mg/g to 261.6 mg/g, while the equilibration time varied between 240 min (4 h) to 360 min (6 h). The adsorption of MB for C.sub.o in the range: 15 mg/L-150 mg/L decreased with increase in temperature for the temperature range 20 C.-50 C.
[0031] During the desorption study described in the following examples, acids (HCl, HCOOH, CH.sub.3COOH) of 0.1 M concentration, base (NaOH) of 0.1 M concentration and solvents (CH.sub.3OH, C.sub.2H.sub.5OH, CH.sub.3COCH.sub.3) were used to elute MB from JFHC@150/3_PA samples. A maximum (40.4%) MB elution was observed with 0.1 M HCOOH, and increased to 52.6%, with 10-folds (1.0 M) increase in HCOOH concentration.
EXAMPLE 1
Synthesis of Jackfruit Peel Hydrochar (JFHC)
[0032] Waste JFP was collected from a local vegetable market in Saudi Arabia, chopped with a knife into small pieces (1 cm cube), and dried at 60 C. for a week in an oven. The dried JFP was washed with deionized (D.I.) water to completely remove any impurities, such as dirt and dust. The dried and rinsed JFP was again dried overnight at 60 C. and the dried JFP was manually crushed using a mortar and pestle. The uniformly crushed JFP biomass was subjected to HTC in a 200 mL polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) lined autoclave. In a typical HTC procedure, a slurry of JFP biomass was first made by adding 75 mL D.I. water to 8 g JFP biomass, and then transferred to an HTC reactor. The reactor was sealed and heated at 150 C. for 3 h in an oven and was then cooled at room temperature. The sample (JFHC@150/3) was collected through filtration and washed several times with D.I. water to remove unwanted products generated during the HTC process.
EXAMPLE 2
Chemical Activation of Developed JFHC Samples
[0033] The developed JFHC samples (JFHC@150/3, JFHC@200/3 and JFHC@250/3) were chemically activated with phosphoric acid (0.1 N H.sub.3PO.sub.4; PA), hydrogen peroxide (10% H.sub.2O.sub.2; HP), and a phosphoric acid+hydrogen peroxide (0.1N H.sub.3PO.sub.4+10% H.sub.2O.sub.2: PA+HP) mixture. One gram of JFHC@150/3 was treated separately with either 50 mL PA (JFHC@150/3_PA), 50 mL HP (JFHC@150/3_HP), or 50 mL PA+HP (JFHC@150/3_PA_HP) with stirring by a magnetic stirrer at 200 rpm for an hour. The resulting chemically activated samples were separated, e.g., through filtration, and washed several times with D.I. water until a neutral pH of the JFHC rinse water was achieved. All three samples were dried overnight at 80 C. in an oven. The same activation protocols for chemical activation were performed on the JFHC@200/3 and JFHC@250/3 samples. The nomenclature of the resulting synthesized JFHC samples is given in Table 1.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Hydrothermal carbonization and chemical activation conditions, nomenclature, and MB adsorption on JFHC samples S4 sample selected for detailed MB adsorption studies. HTC Conditions MB Temp Time adsorption S. No. ( C.) (h) Chemical Treatment Nomenclature (%) S1 150 3 Untreated JFHC@150/3 93.3 S2 200 3 Untreated JFHC@200/3 92.4 S3 250 3 Untreated JFHC@250/3 92.4 S4 150 3 0.1N H.sub.3PO.sub.4 JFHC@150/3_PA 99.5 S5 200 3 0.1N H.sub.3PO.sub.4 JFHC@200/3_PA 98.5 S6 250 3 0.1N H.sub.3PO.sub.4 JFHC@250/3_PA 98.6 S7 150 3 10% H.sub.2O.sub.2 JFHC@150/3_HP 99.0 S8 200 3 10% H.sub.2O.sub.2 JFHC@200/3_HP 98.6 S9 250 3 10% H.sub.2O.sub.2 JFHC@250/3_HP 98.8 S10 150 3 0.1N H.sub.3PO.sub.4 + 10% H.sub.2O.sub.2 JFHC@150/3_PA_HP 99.1 S11 200 3 0.1N H.sub.3PO.sub.4 + 10% H.sub.2O.sub.2 JFHC@250/3_PA_HP 98.8 S12 250 3 0.1N H.sub.3PO.sub.4 + 10% H.sub.2O.sub.2 JFHC@250/3_PA_HP 99.1
EXAMPLE 3
Characterization of Developed and Chemically Activated JFHC Samples, and Presumed MB Adsorption Mechanism
[0034] The functional groups present on the pristine JFHC@150/3 and JFHC@150/3_PA samples and involved during MB adsorption on JFHC@150/3_PA were detected by FT-IR (Nicolet 6700, Thermo Scientific, USA) spectroscopic analysis, as illustrated in
[0035] The chemical composition of pristine and MB saturated JFHC@150/3_PA were characterized by XPS (Joel JPS-9200, Japan) analysis.
[0036] The morphology and elemental content of pristine and MB saturated JFHC@150/3_PA were determined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM: Nova 200 NanoLab, FEI, USA) coupled with energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX: AMETEK Nova 200) spectroscopic analysis.
[0037] Thermogravimetric analysis of JFHC@150/3_PA was performed (TGA-DTA: Q500 TGA, USA) at temperatures ranging from 30 C.-750 C. under N.sub.2 atmosphere.
[0038]
EXAMPLE 4
Adsorption Experiments and Results
[0039] Preliminary studies were carried out to evaluate performance among the pristine and chemically activated JFHC samples for maximum MB removal efficiency. Batch scale adsorption experiments were carried out in 100 mL Erlenmeyer flasks, containing 25 mL MB solution of initial concentration (C.sub.o). 20 mg/L was equilibrated with 0.01 g each pristine or chemically activated JFHC sample, under shaking conditions at 80 rpm for 24 h. Once equilibrium was reached, solid (JFHC sample) and solution (MB solution) phases were separated through filtration and the residual MB concentration was analyzed by UV-visible spectrometry (Thermo Scientific Evolution 600, UK) at a maximum wave length (.sub.max) of 665 nm. The adsorption of MB on JFHC was calculated as:
[0040] The observed MB adsorptions (in %) for each JFHC sample is provided in Table 1 (under Example 2). The effect of variables viz., pH, contact time (t), temperature (T), dose (m), initial concentration (C.sub.o) on MB adsorption onto JFHC@150/3_PA (sample with maximum (99.5%) MB removal) were further studied and MB adsorption capacities at equilibrium and at any time t were calculated as:
[0041] The adsorption of MB at C.sub.o: 50 mg/L on JFHC@150/3_PA as a function of pH.sub.i is illustrated in
[0042] The adsorption of MB at C.sub.o: 50 mg/L was studied by varying JFHC@150/3_PA dose, as illustrated in
[0043] The adsorption of MB on JFHC@150/3_PA as a function of contact time was studied at varied MB C.sub.o ranging from 25 mg/L-100 mg/L, as illustrated in
[0044]
EXAMPLE 5
Desorption Experiments and Results
[0045] The regeneration potential of JFHC@150/3_PA was tested through batch scale desorption experiments. The MB saturated JFHC@150/3_PA samples described in Example 4 were washed several times with D.I. water to completely remove unadsorbed M.B. Thereafter, the saturated JFHC@150/3_PA samples were treated with one of several eluents chosen from a group of solvents and 0.1 M base or acid solutions. The amount of MB desorbed was calculated as:
[0046]
[0047] It is to be understood that the method of synthesizing hydrochar from jackfruit is not limited to the specific embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the generic language of the following claims enabled by the embodiments described herein, or otherwise shown in the drawings or described above in terms sufficient to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the claimed subject matter.