Table 6.
Comparison of obtained maximum adsorption capacity (Q) of BB with literatures.
Present work | Q, mg/g | Adsorbent material | Q, mg/g | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
BL1-CNSs | 24.56 | Poly(phenylenediamine) grafted electrospun carbon nanofibers (PPDA-gECNFs) | 6–100 | Thamer et al., 201951 |
BL2-CNSs | 32.00 | Active carbon from Nigella sativa waste | 14.49 | Abdel-Ghani et al., 201726 |
BL3-CNSs | 31.76 | Wheat bran grounded powder | 6.41 | Ata et al., 201252 |
BL4-CNSs | 24.41 | Copper oxide/carbon nanocomposites from Vitex negundo Linn leaf | 9.09 | Bhavyasree and Xavier, 202153 |
BL5-CNSs | 34.99 | α-Chitin nanoparticles | 13.16 | Dhananasekaran et al., 201654 |
BL6-CNSs | 35.82 | Pine cone activated carbon | 49.35 | Geçgel and Kolancilar, 201255 |
BL7-CNSs | 70.52 | Iron oxide-graphene oxide composite | 14.31 | Magsino et al., 202056 |
BL8-CNSs | 25.06 | Orange peel activated carbon | 11.62 | Mafra et al., 201357 |
BL9-CNSs | 40.73 | Wheat bran | 6.41 | Ata et al., 201252 |