Semi-coking wastewater generated during coal pyrolysis contains extremely high concentrations of refractory organic pollutants, resulting in elevated chemical oxygen demand (COD) and posing significant environmental risks, making efficient COD removal a critical challenge for sustainable wastewater treatment in the coal chemical industry. In this study, a porous carbon-based resin (XDA-1G) was investigated as an adsorbent for COD removal from semi-coking wastewater. The adsorption performance and underlying mechanisms were systematically evaluated through adsorption isotherm, kinetic, and thermodynamic analyses, combined with structural characterization using FTIR, XPS, BET, XRD, and SEM–EDS. The resin exhibited a high COD removal efficiency of up to 91% with a maximum adsorption capacity of 2182 mg g−1. Kinetic analysis followed the pseudo-second-order model, while the Freundlich isotherm best described the equilibrium behavior, indicating heterogeneous adsorption. Thermodynamic parameters confirmed that the adsorption process is spontaneous and endothermic. Spectroscopic and structural analyses revealed that COD removal is mainly governed by synergistic mechanisms including π–π interactions between aromatic pollutants and the carbon framework, hydrogen bonding with oxygen-containing functional groups, and pore filling within the hierarchical porous structure. These findings demonstrate the strong potential of porous carbon-based resins as efficient adsorbents for treating high-strength industrial wastewater.
Wang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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