Bio Adsorption: An Eco-friendly Alternative for Industrial Effluents Treatment 45
3.4 Equilibrium Isotherms
Another extremely important data to work with the software and to be able to estimate the reactor’s
design dimensions is the qmax (maximum adsorption capacity that comes from the study of
equilibrium isotherms).
For a given solid-liquid system, the dynamics of the adsorption equilibrium of the solute on
the solid is expressed by the ratio between the amount adsorbed at equilibrium per unit mass of
original adsorbent qe (mmol g–1) and the residual concentration at equilibrium in the liquid phase
Ce (mmol L–1), at a constant temperature. The graphical representation of these parameters is known
as adsorption isotherm. The study of the isotherms serves to obtain parameters that characterize
the adsorption phenomenon for a given adsorbent-adsorbate pair and to be able to establish the
experimental conditions that maximize adsorption. In addition, the mathematical correlation of the
process constitutes an important role for the analysis of the assumptions implied by the models and
provide an idea of the adsorption mechanism, the surface properties, as well as the degree of affinity
of the adsorbent (Foo and Hameed 2010).
The Langmuir (1918) and Freundlich (1906) models happen to be the most widely used
isotherm models mentioned in literature. In Table 3.1 a comparison of the characteristic parameters
and assumptions between each model is shown.
As an example, the nonlinear fit of the experimental data and the obtained parameters to the
Langmuir and Freundlich adsorption isotherms for a biomass system of the aquatic macrophyte
Azolla for the adsorption of Cu from an aqueous solution can be represented (Figure 3.4). The R2
value closer to 1 is indicating that the experimental data fits better to the Langmuir model for the
studied system, from which the model parameters are obtained (Figure 3.5).
For the proposed system, the model that best fits the data happens to be Langmuir. This model
is the one that generally results best for lignocellulosic adsorbents as observed in other works
(Guo et al. 2008, Boeykens et al. 2018).
Table 3.1. Comparison between Langmuir and Freundlich model with their respective parameters and assumptions.
Model
Langmuir 1918
Freundlich 1906
Mathematical
expression
qe =
qmaxKLCe
1 + KLCe
qe = Kf Ce
1/n
Parameters
Graph qe vs Ce
● KL (L mmol–1) = constant. Langmuir, related
to adsorption intensity
● qmáx (mmol g–1) = maximum adsorption
capacity
Graph qe vs Ce
● Kf (mmol g–1) constant. Freundlich, related to the
adsorption capacity
● n = related to the intensity of adsorption or
heterogeneity of the system
● n > 1 → favorable adsorption
● n < 1 → unfavorable adsorption
Assumptions
● Maximum adsorption in monolayer
● Adsorption sites with constant energy
● There is no lateral interaction between
neighboring molecules
● Adsorption in multilayers
● Adsorption sites with different affinities
● Adsorption energy varies exponentially
depending on the covered surface