Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
149900 Chemical Engineering Journal 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Erythrosine or Acid Red 51 (C.I. 45430) is a common food dye used for coloring many food products including luncheon meat. Few adsorption studies conducted on erythrosine removal from solution and the tested adsorbents showed modest adsorption values for this dye. Pittsburgh commercial activated carbon showed a reasonable adsorption performance for erythrosine from solution with a maximum capacity of 89.3 mg/g at 40 °C and pH 7. The formation of a complete mono-layer was not established where the fraction of surface coverage was only 0.21. The equilibrium distribution value Kd was 6.51 L/g at 40 °C indicating the high affinity of erythrosine toward activated carbon. Adsorption of erythrosine was an endothermic process (ΔHads 31.6 kJ/mol) and spontaneous over the studied temperatures (293–313 K). By conducting 27 adsorption tests, the influence of six experimental variables (shaking time, pH, mass of adsorbent, initial dye content, ionic strength/NaCl concentration, and solution temperature) on dye adsorption was investigated. Using principal component analysis PCA, an empirical relationship was created for correlating Kd values with the studied variables and the relationship contains six linear terms, six non-linear terms and one interaction term of the variables. Analysis of adsorption data by PCA revealed that linear and non-linear terms of variables were more significant than interaction term for data modeling. Two sets were created for model building and validation. The developed model was effective for predicting Kd, the sums of square errors squared SSE values were 1.6 and 2.1 for calibration and validation sets, respectively. PCA predicted the best combination of the experimental variables that would give the highest possible Kd value, 20.3 L/g.

► Erythrosine is a toxic food dye and has a modest adsorption over many adsorbents. ► Activated carbon showed a high adsorption affinity for erythrosine (Kd 8.0 L/g). ► Principal component analysis PCA is applied to model adsorption data. ► The best combination of adsorption variables was determined using PCA.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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