In a groundbreaking advancement at the intersection of environmental science and materials engineering, researchers from Shaanxi University of Science & Technology have unveiled a novel biochar adsorbent derived from orange peel waste. This innovative material, enhanced through a dual co-activation process with iron (Fe) and zinc (Zn) salts, demonstrates exceptional efficacy in adsorbing methylene blue—a prevalent synthetic dye notorious for its persistence in industrial wastewater. The publication, appearing in the upcoming January 2026 issue of Biochar X, details how the strategic chemical modification at moderate pyrolysis temperatures substantially augments both the structural and chemical properties of the biochar, ushering in a new era for sustainable pollutant removal technologies.
Synthetic dyes like methylene blue pose persistent environmental challenges due to their complex molecular structures, high solubility, and remarkable recalcitrance to natural degradation. These characteristics lead to long-term contamination risks in aquatic ecosystems, rendering conventional wastewater treatments often inadequate. The study confronts this problem by transforming an abundant organic waste—orange peel—into a hierarchical porous biochar with multifunctional surface chemistry tailored for high-capacity adsorption. This approach not only addresses dye pollution but also valorizes agricultural waste, contributing to circular economy initiatives.
Central to the team’s methodology is the simultaneous activation of orange peel biomass using ferric chloride (FeCl₃) and zinc chloride (ZnCl₂) prior to pyrolysis under a nitrogen atmosphere. This dual activation process establishes an intricate three-dimensional porous architecture, markedly enhancing surface area and pore volume compared to unmodified biochar. Specifically, biochar synthesized at 500°C with Fe/Zn co-modification (Fe/Zn-OPBC500) exhibited a staggering 16.1-fold increase in specific surface area and a 5.7-fold expansion in total pore volume. These physical enhancements critically underpin the material’s superior mass transfer and adsorption dynamics.
Advanced characterization techniques—including scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), Raman spectroscopy, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and nitrogen physisorption—were employed to elucidate the structural and chemical transformations induced by co-activation. SEM imagery revealed a well-developed hierarchical porous network optimized for rapid dye ingress and capture. Concurrently, XPS confirmed the presence of iron oxide species and abundant oxygenated functional groups that are integral to the adsorptive interactions with methylene blue molecules.
Adsorption experiments present compelling evidence of the biochar’s enhanced performance. Under standardized conditions, Fe/Zn-OPBC500 achieved an adsorption capacity of 194.5 mg per gram and removed 96.8% of methylene blue dye within a mere 60 minutes. These metrics notably outperform both higher-temperature variants (Fe/Zn-OPBC900) and pristine biochar controls, underscoring the critical balance between pore structure development and surface chemistry optimized at the moderate 500°C pyrolysis temperature.
Kinetic studies further illuminate the adsorption mechanism, with data fitting best to a pseudo-second-order kinetic model. This finding indicates that chemisorption processes dominate the interaction, wherein covalent or highly specific chemical bonding occurs between the dye molecules and active sites on the biochar surface. Complementary isotherm analyses demonstrate adherence to the Langmuir model, consistent with monolayer adsorption on a homogeneous surface, affirming that the adsorbent possesses a finite number of energetically equivalent sites.
Thermodynamic parameters derived from temperature-dependent adsorption trials reveal that the methylene blue uptake is a spontaneous and exothermic process. Such energetics align with the strong binding affinity exhibited by the Fe/Zn-activated biochar, which capitalizes on synergistic surface phenomena. Notably, the adsorbent maintains robust efficiency across a wide pH spectrum ranging from 3 to 11, with pronounced adsorption enhancement at alkaline conditions as the surface acquires more negative charge. This electrostatic tuning expands the adsorbent’s versatility in real-world wastewater scenarios.
The research team also investigated the influence of background ions commonly present in industrial effluents. Their findings indicate that multivalent cations like Fe³⁺ and Ca²⁺ interfere more substantially with adsorption than monovalent ions such as Na⁺, presumably due to competitive binding at reactive sites. Meanwhile, prevalent anions exert comparatively minor inhibitory effects. Such insights are vital for practical deployment since wastewater matrices often contain complex ionic compositions impacting adsorbent efficacy.
Beyond initial adsorption strength, regeneration performance is a critical metric for sustainable application. The Fe/Zn-OPBC500 adsorbent retained over 100 mg g⁻¹ adsorption capacity after seven reuse cycles, underscoring its durability and operational stability. This resilience stems from the material’s engineered pore structure resisting collapse and surface functionalities maintaining integrity and reactivity through repeated dye binding and desorption.
Mechanistic investigations via post-adsorption spectroscopic analysis unveiled a multifaceted interaction network governing methylene blue capture. The researchers identified a blend of electrostatic attraction, hydrogen bonding, π–π stacking interactions between aromatic rings, physical pore confinement, covalent amide-like bonds, and coordination complexes with iron sites. This multiplicity of binding modes demonstrates that the adsorbent’s exceptional performance arises not from a single dominant factor but from the synergistic cooperation between its hierarchical porous morphology and multifunctional surface chemistry.
In sum, this pioneering work establishes that orange peel biomass, a low-cost and renewable feedstock, can be transformed via Fe and Zn co-activation into a superior adsorbent fit for challenging environmental remediation tasks. This material melds scalable, moderate-temperature synthesis with rapid adsorption kinetics and strong multicycle regeneration, representing a significant leap forward in dye wastewater treatment technologies. The findings propel both environmental and materials science fields toward innovative, circular solutions that marry waste valorization with pollution mitigation.
The overarching implications extend beyond methylene blue alone, as the strategy demonstrated could be adapted for a broad spectrum of synthetic dyes and organic contaminants. This research exemplifies how intelligent chemical modifications at the nanoscale can amplify natural materials’ functionalities, delivering potent, reusable tools for safeguarding aquatic ecosystems against industrial pollutants. As regulatory pressures on wastewater treatment intensify globally, such advances become critical enablers of sustainable manufacturing and cleaner water resources.
Moving forward, exploring scale-up potentials, integrating with advanced treatment trains, and assessing performance in complex real industrial wastewater will be pivotal to fully realizing the industrial and environmental impact of this technology. Nonetheless, the current study’s innovative approach to co-activation and the elucidation of adsorption mechanisms mark it as a transformative milestone in biochar science and environmental remediation.
Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: Hierarchical porous biochar with Fe/Zn co-activation derived from orange waste: enhanced methylene blue adsorption and mechanistic insights
News Publication Date: 30-Jan-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.48130/bchax-0026-0001
References: 10.48130/bchax-0026-0001
Keywords: Biochar, Adsorption, Methylene Blue, Orange Peel Waste, Fe/Zn Co-activation, Porous Materials, Wastewater Treatment, Dye Removal, Environmental Remediation, Surface Chemistry, Pyrolysis, Regeneration

