Food Waste (Beetroot and Apple Pomace) as Sorbent for Lead from Aqueous Solutions—Alternative to Landfill Disposal

Author:

Šoštarić Tatjana1,Simić Marija1ORCID,Lopičić Zorica1ORCID,Zlatanović Snežana2ORCID,Pastor Ferenc3,Antanasković Anja1ORCID,Gorjanović Stanislava2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Technology of Nuclear and Other Mineral Raw Materials (ITNMS), Franchet d’Eperey 86, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

2. Institute of General and Physical Chemistry, University of Belgrade, Studenstski trg 12/V, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

3. Faculty of Chemistry, University of Belgrade, Studentski trg 12-16, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

Abstract

This article presents studies, whose main goal was to minimize food waste. To achieve this goal, it is necessary to expand the scope of their application, for example, for the purification of polluted water from heavy metals. Millions of tons of waste from the fruit and vegetable industry, including pomace of apples and beetroots, are thrown into landfills, posing a danger to the environment. In order to solve the problems with the disposal of these wastes, the authors investigated their sorption potential for the removal of lead from wastewater. The sorbents, dried apple (AP), and beetroots (BR) pomaces were characterized by various methods (study of composition, zeta potential, FTIR-ATR, and SEM-EDX). Various models of sorption kinetics and sorption isotherms were analyzed. Kinetical studies under optimal conditions showed that the sorption process occurs through complexation and ion exchange and the determining stage limiting the rate of sorption is the diffusion of lead ions in the sorbent. The maximum sorption capacity was 31.7 and 79.8 mg/g for AP and BR, respectively. The thermodynamic data revealed the spontaneous sorption of lead ions by sorbents. The temperature rise contributes to the sorption increase by the AP sorbent, while for the BR sorbent, the opposite effect is observed. The obtained results showed that apple and beetroots pomaces can serve as effective renewable materials for the preparation of sorbents, contributing to the solution of complex environmental problems.

Funder

Ministry of Science, Technology Development and Innovation of the Republic of Serbia

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Process Chemistry and Technology,Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous),Bioengineering

Reference51 articles.

1. FAO (2018). Food Loss and Waste and the Right to Adequate Food: Making the Connection, FAO.

2. Environmental Impacts of Food Waste in Europe;Scherhaufer;Waste Manag.,2018

3. Germancooperation (2023, January 02). The Food Shifters—Introducing Food Waste Management in the City of Belgrade. Available online: https://germancooperation.rs/the-food-shifters-introducing-food-waste-management-in-the-city-of-belgrade/.

4. FOASTAT (2023, January 14). Available online: https://www.fao.org/3/cb4477en/online/cb4477en.html#chapter-2_1.

5. Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia (2023, January 14). Available online: https://data.stat.gov.rs/.

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