Department of pure and applied chemistry, faculty of natural and applied sciences, veritas university Abuja, Nigeria.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 27(02), 417-443
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2025.27.2.2833
Received on 24 June 2025; revised on 03 August; accepted on 06 August 2025
Adsorbates adsorption on adsorbent is a complex process and this study analyzed critically adsorption mechanisms using theoretical perspectives. Although considerable advances have been made in understanding the isolated role played by various system properties, theoretical developments have not been rigorous and they lag behind experimental and conceptual developments. Some of the experimental difficulties and theoretical complexities that are responsible for the slow development of a unifying adsorption model covering a range of adsorbates-adsorbent combinations have been analyzed critically from adsorption principle, experimental algorithms for obtaining adsorption and adsorption kinetics parameters as well as the adsorption parameters analysis using different adsorption, kinetic and thermodynamic models. the sudden decrease of adsorption densities of pH, temperature and adsorbent dosage after successive increase as been explained to be as a result of the effect of H+ and/or OH- ions, intermolecular forces and/or weakening of the attractive forces due to excessive heat energy at higher temperature. The nexus between existing adsorption models such as Stern-Grahame and Equilibrium Constant (K_c), Henry and Arrhenius laws, Langmuir isotherm and thermodynamic variables (〖lnK〗_eq 〖,∆G〗^o, 〖∆H〗^o and 〖∆S〗^o), Langmuir and Stern-Grahame’s isotherm equations and pseudo first and second kinetic models were analyzed. The major individual contributions to the overall energy of adsorption have been identified and discussed for effective analysis of adsorption mechanisms and systems.
Adsorption isotherm; Kinetic models; Thermodynamics; Arrhenius law; Adsorption density
Preview Article PDF
Chizoma Nwakego ADEWUMI, Enajeme Daniel AGBAGHARE and Enogbe Joy EMMANUEL. Kinetics–thermodynamics integration for improved understanding of adsorption mechanisms: A critical perspective. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 27(02), 417-443. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2025.27.2.2833.
Copyright © 2025 Author(s) retain the copyright of this article. This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Liscense 4.0