Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/29159
Title: Preparation and characterization of banana trunk activated carbon using H<sub>3</sub>PO<sub>4</sub> activation: A rotatable central composite design approach
Authors: Mohammed Danish
Pin, Zhou
Ziyang, Lou
Ahmad, Tanweer
Majeed, Shahnaz
Ahmad Naim Ahmad Yahya
Khanday, Waheed Ahmad
Abdul Khalil, H.P.S.
(UniKL RCMP)
Keywords: Activated carbon
Biomass waste
Characterization
Chemical activation
Optimization design
Phosphoric acid
Surface area
Issue Date: Apr-2022
Publisher: Elsevier Ltd
Citation: Mohammed Danish, Pin, Z., Ziyang, L., Ahmad, T., Majeed, S., Ahmad Naim Ahmad Yahya, Khanday, W. A., & Abdul Khalil, H. P. S. (2022). Preparation and characterization of banana trunk activated carbon using H3PO4 activation: A rotatable central composite design approach. Materials Chemistry and Physics, 282, 125989. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.matchemphys.2022.125989
Abstract: Banana trunk waste was utilized to produce activated carbons with improved surface area and phosphorous atom dispersed surface through the chemical activation method using phosphoric acid. Banana trunk activated carbon (BTAC) production was optimized through the rotatable central composite design (RCCD) approach of the response surface methodology (RSM). The independent variables selected for optimization were activation time (35.5–134.5 min), activation temperature (367–932 °C), and H3PO4 concentrations (0.36–8.14 mol/L). The optimized conditions of the independent variables obtained through RCCD were 50 min (activation time), 583 °C (activation temperature), and 6.60 mol/L (H3PO4 concentration) for a maximum Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface area of 1290 m2/g. Banana trunk activated carbon samples were characterized for bulk and surface elemental composition, surface morphology, thermal stability, functional groups, pHzpc, and crystallinity behavior. The characterization results suggested that BTAC has a porous surface with carbon as the backbone element with the highest percentage of 78%. The oxygen atom occupies the surface with 12%, and the phosphorus atom is spread almost 6% over the carbon surface. The raw banana trunk was thermally decomposed at an onset temperature of 240 °C and above, whereas the banana trunk (BTAC) was thermally stable up to 700 °C. Phosphoric acid-activated banana trunk activated carbon composed of the following surface functional groups: –OH, –C = O, -P = O, -P-O-C, and multiple carbon-carbon bonds.
URI: https://ir.unikl.edu.my/jspui/handle/123456789/29159
ISSN: 02540584
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles



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