2022
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy12020535
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Utilisation of Oil Palm’s Empty Fruit Bunch Spikelets for Oil-Spill Removal

Abstract: Agricultural sorbents have received attention for their effectiveness in oil removal. In Malaysia, oil palm’s empty fruit bunch (EFB) spikelets are an abundant agricultural waste that provides a non-toxic, renewable resource of cellulosic materials. In this study, the effectiveness of EFB spikelets to remove oil spills from seawater pollution in a filter system was investigated and the best optimisation approach for filtering conditions was determined. Experiments for oil spill clean-up were performed using a … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The oil/water sorption capacity continued to increase, despite the fact that the efficiency of engine oil absorption (%) was decreasing from 10%. Puasa et al [34] that the equilibrium established when the reactive sites of sorbents are saturated with oil molecules, which encourage desorption, causes the efficiency of engine oil adsorption by RH to decline once the engine oil concentration approaches 10%. This is the reason that 10% was chosen as the best engine oil concentration, giving the highest efficiency of engine oil (71.67 ± 1.02) and the lowest water absorption (8.17 ± 0.44) compared to other concentrations.…”
Section: Optimisation Of Factors For Oil/water Sorption Capacity Usin...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The oil/water sorption capacity continued to increase, despite the fact that the efficiency of engine oil absorption (%) was decreasing from 10%. Puasa et al [34] that the equilibrium established when the reactive sites of sorbents are saturated with oil molecules, which encourage desorption, causes the efficiency of engine oil adsorption by RH to decline once the engine oil concentration approaches 10%. This is the reason that 10% was chosen as the best engine oil concentration, giving the highest efficiency of engine oil (71.67 ± 1.02) and the lowest water absorption (8.17 ± 0.44) compared to other concentrations.…”
Section: Optimisation Of Factors For Oil/water Sorption Capacity Usin...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Natural organic sorbents have received more attention than their synthetic and inorganic counterparts, although all three types of sorbents have been studied in depth during the past few decades [32][33][34]. Kenaf fibre, cotton fibre, sawdust, wood fibre, corn cob, rice straw, kapok fibre, wool fibre, milkweed, coconut husk, rice husk (RH), oil palm empty fruit bunch (EFB), cattail fibre, hay, feathers, Guinea grass, and bagasse are examples of organic sorbents [29,[35][36][37].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%