2013
DOI: 10.1007/s13201-013-0117-y
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Removal of dyes using agricultural waste as low-cost adsorbents: a review

Abstract: Color removal from wastewater has been a matter of concern, both in the aesthetic sense and health point of view. Color removal from textile effluents on a continuous industrial scale has been given much attention in the last few years, not only because of its potential toxicity, but also mainly due to its visibility problem. There have been various promising techniques for the removal of dyes from wastewater. However, the effectiveness of adsorption for dye removal from wastewater has made it an ideal alterna… Show more

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Cited by 460 publications
(212 citation statements)
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References 112 publications
(152 reference statements)
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“…Due to deposition of dyes on the available adsorption site on adsorbent material, any further increase in contact time will not increase the uptake [5]. At this point, the amount of dye desorbing form the adsorbent is in a state of dynamic equilibrium with the amount of dye being adsorbed onto the adsorbent.…”
Section: Effect Of Contact Timementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Due to deposition of dyes on the available adsorption site on adsorbent material, any further increase in contact time will not increase the uptake [5]. At this point, the amount of dye desorbing form the adsorbent is in a state of dynamic equilibrium with the amount of dye being adsorbed onto the adsorbent.…”
Section: Effect Of Contact Timementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Synthetic dyes gained huge popularity in textile and dyeing process because of their stability to light, temperature, detergent and variety in colour [3]. In fact, it has reached nearly 100,000 different types of dyes and annually produce over 7.0x10 5 tonnes per year worldwide [3][4][5][6][7][8]. Loss of up to 40% dye during the dyeing process are the result of coloured wastewater that passed into the environment or treatment plants [10].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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