• Title of article

    A Review of Caffeine Adsorption Studies onto Various Types of Adsorbents

  • Author/Authors

    Andre´s Quintero-Jaramillo, Javier Departamento de Ingenier´ıa Qu´ımica - Universidad Nacional de Colombia Sede Manizales - Campus La Nubia - km 7 v´ıa al Aeropuerto - AA 127 - Manizales - Colombia , Ignacio Carrero-Mantilla, Javier Departamento de Ingenier´ıa Qu´ımica - Universidad Nacional de Colombia Sede Manizales - Campus La Nubia - km 7 v´ıa al Aeropuerto - AA 127 - Manizales - Colombia , Rocı´o Sanabria-Gonza´lez, Nancy Departamento de Ingenier´ıa Qu´ımica - Universidad Nacional de Colombia Sede Manizales - Campus La Nubia - km 7 v´ıa al Aeropuerto - AA 127 - Manizales - Colombia

  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    1
  • To page
    18
  • Abstract
    A systematic literature review of publications from 2000 to 2020 was carried out to identify research trends on adsorbent materials for the removal of caffeine from aqueous solutions. Publications were retrieved from three databases (Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar). Words “adsorption an‎d caffeine” were examined into titles, abstracts, and keywords. A brief bibliometric analysis was performed with emphasis on the type of publication and of most cited articles. Materials for the removal of caffeine were classified according to the type of material into three main groups: organic, inorganic, and composites, each of them subdivided into different subgroups consistent with their origin or production. Tables resume for each subgroup of adsorbents the key information: specific surface area, dose, pH, maximum adsorption capacity, and isotherm models for the removal of caffeine. The highest adsorption capacities were achieved by organic adsorbents, specifically those with granular activated carbon (1961.3 mg/g) and grape stalk activated carbon (916.7 mg/g). Phenyl-phosphate-based porous organic polymer (301 mg/g), natural sandy loam sediment (221.2 mg/g), composites of MCM-48 encapsulated graphene oxide (153.8 mg/g), and organically modified clay (143.7 mg/g) showed adsorption capacities lower than those of activated carbons. In some activated carbons, a relation between the specific surface area (SSA) and the maximum adsorption capacity (Qmax) was found.
  • Keywords
    Caffeine Adsorption Studies , Various Types , Adsorbents
  • Journal title
    The Scientific World Journal
  • Serial Year
    2021
  • Record number

    2624675