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Assessment of The Potential Effectiveness of Poultry Egg Shells in the Removal of Lead Ions from Contaminated Water

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Abstract

The influence of pH, initial concentration of Pb2+ ions, sorbent (poultry egg shells) dose, and contact time on the adsorption of Pb2+ from contaminated water to egg shells was studied. Results indicate that adsorption capacity increases with the increase of Pb2+ ion concentration and dose of egg shells, and varied with change of pH. Egg shell was mainly composed of CaCO3 and other few elements as, S, Al, Mg, Si, Cl, K and Zn. The optimum pH for lead removal was at pH 7 with highest efficiency of 96.65 %, this was also revealed by Freundlich adsorption isotherm that displayed the highest value of K of 3.18419 for wastewater of concentration 0.884 mg/l Pb. The optimum dose of egg shells was 25g with contact time of 90 min and residue lead of 0.027 mg/l which is lower than the Limits for Municipal and Industrial Wastewater discharge (0.1 mg/l). The adsorption isotherms also showed that the lead removal efficiency was descending from pH 7, 12.3 to 3.4. These results suggest that poultry egg shells can be a potential candidate adsorbent material for removal of lead ions from contaminated water.

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How to Cite

Assessment of The Potential Effectiveness of Poultry Egg Shells in the Removal of Lead Ions from Contaminated Water. (2025). The Journal of Building and Land Development, November, 120-135. http://journals.aru.ac.tz/index.php/JBLD/article/view/96