Carbon adsorbents derived from biomass (agricultural and household residues) have been widely used in the sequestration of hazardous substances from the environment due to their distinctive qualities of large internal surface area, mechanical integrity, and regeneration. The need for carbon adsorbents for sequestration of dyes, heavy metals, and crude oil components has increased because of environmental concerns. This has led to studies of carbon adsorbents derived from agricultural and household biomass residues. These adsorbents have been used to remove pollutants. Although numerous reviews have been published before, analogy of results obtained using different adsorbents is hard due to dissimilarities in research data. Against this backdrop, the purpose of the research survey was to review the contemporary publications regarding the production of activated carbon from biomass sources highlighting specifically its utilization in removing toxic wastes from water solution such as oil spill, dyes, and sundry hazardous substances. Also the work focuses on the methods for the restoration of the spent adsorbents and their end use.
The adsorptive removal of total dissolved solids by activated coal using response surface methodology was investigated. A four-variable central composite experimental design was applied to correlate the adsorption variables (effluent pH, adsorbent dosage, contact time, and adsorption temperature). The adsorption variables were optimized based on the removal of total dissolved solids from fibre cement industry effluent. Three-dimensional surface plots were generated to estimate the effect of the combinations of the independent variables on the adsorption efficiency. The results of the model validation gave experimental yield 96.2%, predicted yield 96.5% obtained at effluent pH 6.27, adsorbent dosage 27.60 mg L −1 , contact time 48.00 min, and adsorption temperature of 31.00 °C. The good agreement found between observed and predicted values supports the suitability of the applied model to predict the adsorption treatment.
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