Ion Exchange - Studies and Applications 2015
DOI: 10.5772/60952
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Anion Exchange Resins as Effective Sorbents for Removal of Acid, Reactive, and Direct Dyes from Textile Wastewaters

Abstract: Coloured wastewaters are a consequence of batch processes in both dye-manufacturing and dye-consuming industries. Dyes are widely used in a number of industries, such as textile and leather dyeing, food, cosmetics, paper printing, gasoline, with the textile industry as the largest consumer. Dyeing as a fundamental operation during textile fibre processing causes the production of more or less coloured wastewaters, depending on the degree of fixation of dyes on substrates, which varies with the nature of substa… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…Inorganic electrolytes and surfactants such as NaCl and SDS are widely used in chemical treatment of fibres. Sodium chloride increases relatively low fixation of reactive dyes on cellulose fibres, whereas anionic surfactant SDS is applied as wetting, penetrating and dispersing agent in dyeing processes (Wawrzkiewicz and Hubicki, 2015). Therefore, the effect of the presence of above-mentioned auxiliaries on RB5 removal by SA96 (of the higher capacity towards the dye than that of SA3) in the 10 mg/l RB5-5-20 g/l NaCl and 10 mg/l RB5-0.1-1.0 g/l SDS systems was investigated.…”
Section: Kinetic and Equilibrium Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Inorganic electrolytes and surfactants such as NaCl and SDS are widely used in chemical treatment of fibres. Sodium chloride increases relatively low fixation of reactive dyes on cellulose fibres, whereas anionic surfactant SDS is applied as wetting, penetrating and dispersing agent in dyeing processes (Wawrzkiewicz and Hubicki, 2015). Therefore, the effect of the presence of above-mentioned auxiliaries on RB5 removal by SA96 (of the higher capacity towards the dye than that of SA3) in the 10 mg/l RB5-5-20 g/l NaCl and 10 mg/l RB5-0.1-1.0 g/l SDS systems was investigated.…”
Section: Kinetic and Equilibrium Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For this purpose, many different types of adsorbents (both porous and non-porous) are used to separate dangerous molecules from the aqueous environment. The group of porous adsorbents includes activated carbons, silica gels, zeolites (natural and synthetic), anion exchangers, porous glasses and metal oxides (Bandura et al, 2015;Chalupnik et al, 2013;Nowicki, 2016;Nowicki et al, 2016, Wawrzkiewicz andHubicki, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Anionic exchange resins also possess adsorption capabilities for the removal of anionic dyes [40,41]. For the corresponding comparison experiments, different amounts of Amberlite ® -410 and Amberlite ® -900, which feature quaternary ammonium groups on the microbead surface, were incorporated in the same desalting column (Figure S7).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The widely used water softening case eliminates Ca2 + and Mg2+ ions with Na + or K + ions. In addition, ion exchange resins are furthermore used to hinder heavy metal such as mercury, lead, and arsenic [19][20][21].…”
Section: Other Treatment Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%