Characterisation of pristine and KOH-modified rice husk biochars for efficient heavy metal removal in wastewater treatment
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Date
2025
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Publisher
Scientific African
Abstract
Biochar-based technology is emerging as a low-cost adsorbent in municipal and industrial
wastewater treatment, given its large surface area and highly porous structure. Rice husk presents
a significant waste problem as it constitutes disposal challenges and is barely useful for other
purposes. In this study, rice husks (RH) from locally grown rice cultivars were obtained from two
rice mills in Nigeria and pyrolysed to biochar at 400 and 500 ◦C before chemical modification
using 2 M KOH. The adsorption capacities (Qe) of the pristine RH biochar pyrolysed at 400 ◦C for
Zn2+ and Pb2+, following synthetic wastewater treatment, were 462.5 and 142.8 mg/g, and at
500 ◦C, 1047.5 and 275.5 mg/g, respectively. KOH-modified biochar outperformed its pristine
counterparts, as the recorded Qe for Zn2+ on the KOH-modified RH1 pyrolysed at 400 ◦C
(KRH1_400B) showed 1547.75 mg/g, and 1534.25 mg/g at 500 ◦C (KRH1_500B), respectively,
with a 98 % Zn2+ removal efficiency. For Pb2+, all KOH-modified biochars for RH1 and RH2
showed a 100 % removal efficiency and maximum Qe of 275.5 mg/g. Scanning Electron Microscopy
(SEM) revealed increased poration of 200 μm sized pores, densely distributed across the
rough surface of the KOH-modified biochar. Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy showed varying
carbon and silicon compositions of the RH1 and KRH1_400B. Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy
corroborated structural disparities in SEM, as compositional differences in the observed
functional groups were identified in the chemically modified biochar. These include hydroxyl
(3354 cm-1) and silicate ion (1017.6 cm-1) which enhance sorption capacity. X-ray Fluorescence
revealed an increase in MgO, K2O, and Al2O3 upon KOH modification attributable to the
improved heavy metal adsorption efficiency. These results highlight the impact of pyrolysis
temperature, physicochemical properties of biomass and chemical modification on heavy metal
removal efficiency of biochar for sustainable environmental remediation.
Description
Keywords
Biochar Rice husk Slow pyrolysis Wastewater Heavy metal Alkaline modification Adsorption