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Nickel-Modified Orange Peel Biochar for the Efficient Adsorptive Removal of Eriochrome Black T from Aqueous Solution
Nickel-Modified Orange Peel Biochar for the Efficient Adsorptive Removal of Eriochrome Black T from Aqueous Solution
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Nickel-Modified Orange Peel Biochar for the Efficient Adsorptive Removal of Eriochrome Black T from Aqueous Solution
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Nickel-Modified Orange Peel Biochar for the Efficient Adsorptive Removal of Eriochrome Black T from Aqueous Solution
Nickel-Modified Orange Peel Biochar for the Efficient Adsorptive Removal of Eriochrome Black T from Aqueous Solution

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Nickel-Modified Orange Peel Biochar for the Efficient Adsorptive Removal of Eriochrome Black T from Aqueous Solution
Nickel-Modified Orange Peel Biochar for the Efficient Adsorptive Removal of Eriochrome Black T from Aqueous Solution
Journal Article

Nickel-Modified Orange Peel Biochar for the Efficient Adsorptive Removal of Eriochrome Black T from Aqueous Solution

2025
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Overview
The widespread discharge of synthetic dyes such as Eriochrome Black T (EBT) into water bodies poses significant environmental and health concerns due to their toxicity, persistence, and resistance to degradation. In response to this issue, the removal of EBT dye from aqueous solutions using nickel-modified orange peel biochar (MOPB) was investigated in this study at various experimental conditions such as adsorbent dose, pH, concentration of dye, temperature, and contact time. Biochar was prepared from orange peels via pyrolysis, and structural characterization was performed using FTIR, XRD, and SEM to assess morphological changes, pore structure, and functional groups post-modification. MOPB exhibited significantly enhanced adsorption capacity compared to unmodified biochar. Optimal removal (at 0.1 g adsorbent dose, 25 ppm dye concentration, 90 min contact time, 35 °C, and pH 4) resulted in maximum EBT elimination. The equilibrium dataset was evaluated using Langmuir and Freundlich isotherm models. The Langmuir model (R2 = 0.99) best described the uptake of EBT dye, which implies that the adsorption of EBT dye onto MOPB was monolayered. The kinetic data were also analyzed using pseudo-first-order and pseudo-second-order models. The pseudo-second-order kinetic model was found to be the best fit (R2 = 0.99), indicating that it governs the rate-limiting step of the reaction. Thermodynamic parameters confirmed that the adsorption process is spontaneous and exothermic. These findings demonstrate the potential of MOPB as a low-cost, sustainable adsorbent for the efficient removal of EBT from industrial wastewater.