Equilibrium and DFT modeling studies for the biosorption of Safranin O dye from water samples using Bacillus subtilis biosorbent.
Date
2023Metadata
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Çetinkaya, S., Kaya, S., Aksu, A., Çetintaş, H. İ., Jalbani, N. S., Erkan, S., & Marzouki, R. (2023). Equilibrium and DFT modeling studies for the biosorption of Safranin O dye from water samples using Bacillus subtilis biosorbent. Journal of Molecular Structure, 1276, 134761.Abstract
Current study deals with the biosorption of Safranin O dye from water by using high potential Bacillus subtilis biosorbent material. The presence of functional groups and surface morphology of biosorbent was analyzed by using sophisticated analytical techniques such as FT-IR (Fouirer Transform Infrared Spectrophotometer), SEM (Scanning Electron Microscopy), EDX (Energy Dispersive X-Ray Analysis), and TGA (Thermogravimetric Analysis). To check the dye removal potential of Bacillus subtilis sorbent, batch adsorption experiments were performed under the optimized conditions. The biosorption experiments showed that the Bacillus subtilis sorbents remove 80% of safranin O dye from water. The biosorption mechanism is depends upon the solution pH thus the maximum biosorption was observed at (5.5–6.5). Moreover, the biosorbent dose has been optimized and it has observed that the maximum concentration of safranin O dye has been removed using the 50 mg.L−1 of Bacillus subtilis. The biosorption equilibrium data were well fitted by the Langmuir adsorption isotherm due to good regression coefficient value (R2=0.98) and better Langmuir capacity (0.383 mmol.g−1), while the kinetic studies indicated that the biosorption followed the pseudo-second-order model. The thermodynamic parameters values showed that the biosorption is process is endothermic and spontaneous nature. In addition, molecular docking was also performed to examine the interaction between the safranin O dye molecule and the Bacillus subtilis bacterial cell line.
Source
Journal of Molecular StructureVolume
1276URI
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022286022024073https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12418/14887