Chicken cartilage-derived carbon for efficient xylene removal

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Downloads

3

Date issued

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Location

Signature

License

Abstract

Chicken cartilage was used for the first time as a raw material for the microwave-assisted synthesis of biochar and activated carbon. Various microwave absorbers, i.e., commercial active carbon, scrap tyres, silicon carbide, and chicken bone-derived biochar, as well as various microwave powers, were tested for their effect on the rate of pyrolysis and the type of products formed. Biochars synthesised under 400 W in the presence of scrap tyres and chicken bone-derived biochar were activated with KOH and K2CO3 with detergent to produce activated carbon with a highly develooped porous structure that would be able to effectively adsorb xylene vapours. All carbons were thoroughly characterised (infrared spectroscopy, X-ray fluorescence spectrometry, nitrogen adsorption/desorption, Raman spectroscopy, proximate and ultimate analysis) and tested as xylene sorbents in dynamic systems. It was found that the activation causes an increase of up to 1042 m2 ·g −1 in the specific surface area, which ensures the sorption capacity of xylene about 300 mg·g −1 . Studies of the composition of biogas emitted during pyrolysis revealed that particularly valuable gaseous products are formed when pyrolysis is carried out in the presence of silicon carbide as a microwave absorber.

Description

Subject(s)

waste animal bones, microwave pyrolysis, microporous carbon adsorbent, adsorption, volatile organic compounds (VOC)

Citation

International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2023, vol. 24, issue 13, art. no. 10868.