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Article

Effect of Absorption Time for the Preparation of Activated Carbon from Wasted Tree Leaves of Quercus alba and Investigating Life Cycle Assessment

by
Muhammad Amin
1,* and
Hamad Hussain Shah
2
1
Department of Energy Systems Engineering, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea
2
Department of Engineering, University of Sannio, Piazza Roma 21, 82100 Benevento, Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Submission received: 17 September 2022 / Revised: 18 October 2022 / Accepted: 25 October 2022 / Published: 28 October 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Carbons for Health and Environmental Protection)

Abstract

:
In this article, the effect of absorption time on the surface chemistry and pore structure of activated carbon (AC) from waste leaves of Quercus alba with the H3PO4 chemical activation method. XRD, SEM, EDX, BET, TGA, and FT-IR analyses of prepared AC were used to figure out the properties of the activated carbon. The results demonstrated that the 48 h absorption time of H3PO4 contributed to the highest surface area, 943.2 m2/g, among all the prepared activated carbon samples. As the absorption time of the phosphoric acid activating agent was increased, the surface area initially increased and then started to decrease. The further surface chemical characterization of activated carbon was determined by FT-IR spectroscopic method. Life cycle assessment methodology was employed in order to investigate the environmental impacts associated with the laboratory steps for activated carbon (AC) production. The LCA approach was implemented using OpenLCA 1.10.3 software, while ReCiPe Midpoint (H) was used for environmental impact assessment. The results of the LCA study showed that the impact categories related to toxicity were particularly affected by the utilization of electrical energy (≈90%). The power utilized during laboratory procedures was the main cause of environmental impacts, contributing an average of nearly 70% across all impact categories, with the maximum contribution to the impact category of freshwater ecotoxicity potential (≈97%) and the minimum contribution to land use potential (≈10%).

1. Introduction

Quercus alba (white oak) is a long-lived shaded tree normally found in eastern Canada and some parts of the United States that grows up to 100 feet. Quercus alba is one of the preeminent hardwoods of eastern North America [1,2]. Because of its ability to grow in a variety of climatic regimes, it is found not only in North America but also in Asia. In India, more than 16 species of oak are present, out of which 10 are present in the eastern Himalayas, and the rest of them are found in the western Himalayan regions [3]. Quercus alba has been utilized in various wood-oriented industries, including the cooperage industry, forest aesthetics, and wildlife. In addition, Quercus alba can be used for the preparation of activated carbon (AC). There are numerous biomass sources available for the preparation of AC, but the most commonly used are corn straw [4], Christmas trees [5], almond shells [6], walnut shells [7], coconut shells [8], pomegranate peels [9], Lantana camara [10,11], olive tree leaves [12], and many more [13]. Among all these waste biomass sources, the leaves of Quercus alba are abundantly available as a waste biomass source. Activated carbon with an enormous surface area is frequently used in industries as an adsorbent [14], for catalysis purposes [15],and in other important applications. Figure 1 shows the use of activated carbon for various applications.
Activated carbon can be produced from biomass by the thermal process through direct carbonization or by first carbonizing the biomass to biochar and later converting the biochar into activated carbon [16]. Activated carbon is generally produced by chemical or physical activation methods. In the physical activation method, the process is performed under the circumstances of an inert atmosphere, and pyrolysis of carbonaceous material is performed at a high temperature to eliminate most of the hydrogen and oxygen content [17]. The chemical activation process involves carbonization at a low temperature of 400–700 °C with a chemical activation agent [18]. Biomass or wood wastes are often used to produce activated carbon in the chemical activation process [19]. Different activation agents have different effects on the thermal degradation of the organic compounds in biomass. To date, many activation agents, such as H3PO4, ZnCl2, FeCl3, KOH, H2SO4, and many more, have been used for the preparation of activated carbon [20]. Among these, H3PO4 is used the most frequently. The H3PO4 activating agent increases the surface area of activated carbon and increases the number of defects of the anchoring site for metal particles [21]. H3PO4 oxidizes carbon particles at 500–600 °C to create micropores [22] and has the advantage of inhibiting the shrinkage of particles with a low operating cost.
The important factors for the preparation of AC are the raw biomass source, activation method, activation agent, impregnation ratio, concentration of the activated agent, absorption time of the activation agent, and calcination temperature. The surface area of AC is significantly influenced by all the above parameters [23]. The first aim of this study was to determine the effect of the absorption time of the activation agent (H3PO4) on the preparation of activated carbon from waste leaves from Quercus alba.
Life cycle assessment (LCA) is a methodological approach used to evaluate processes’ environmental impacts. There are generally four stages of LCA: (i) goal and scope definition, (ii) life cycle inventory (LCI), (iii) life cycle impact assessment (LCIA), and (iv) interpretation. Few studies have been published regarding the ecological assessment of AC production by utilizing the LCA approach. Arena et al. [24] and Tagne Tiegam et al. [25] assessed the environmental impacts of producing AC from coconuts shells and cocoa pods. The authors found that during AC production, the consumption of energy and the chemical activation stage caused most of the environmental damage. By using sustainability factors assessed through LCA, a quantitative optimization approach was developed by Sepúlveda-Cervantes et al. for efficient AC production to reduce the environmental impacts associated with the production process using soybean shells as the precursor [26,27].
Therefore, the second aim of this study was to assess the environmental impacts associated with the conversion process of waste leaves of Quercus alba into activated carbon and to assess the key variables that affect activated carbon production. The overall objective of the current study was to overcome the information gap related to the environmental impacts of producing activated carbon from Quercus alba.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Chemicals

Distilled water and phosphoric acid (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA, initial concentration 85% and density 1.68 g/mL) were purchased from a local market in Seoul, Republic of Korea. The waste leaves of Quercus alba were collected from Seoul National University.

2.2. Activated Carbon Preparation Procedure

Fallen waste leaves of Quercus alba contain some dust particles. Therefore, we washed them with distilled water. Then, they were dried in a fume hood for 24 h. The cleaned and dried leaves of Quercus alba were crushed and ground and passed through a sieve of 150 µm. A very fine biomass powder was further processed for the absorption step [28]. In this study, H3PO4 was used as the activating agent. The absorption time of the H3PO4 (wt 50%) activation agent was studied for 16 h, 24 h, 48 h, and 72 h. The material was calcined in a furnace at 500 °C for three h. The excess H3PO4 in the prepared char was removed by washing with distilled water until the pH remained neutral [11]. Finally, it was dried in an oven for 24 h at 105 °C to acquire activated carbon. The schematic diagram for the preparation of activated carbon is shown in Figure 2.

2.3. Characterization of Activated Carbon

A Micromeritics Gemini V Flow Prep 060 (Gemini V-060, Seoul, Korea) was used to analyze the surface area (SBET). SEM–EDX (EM-30AX, COXIC2-17230 Model SPT-20,COXEM, Seoul, Korea) was used to reveal the surface morphology. Smart Lab (Rigaku, Japan) was used to determine the crystal structure (X-ray diffraction technique). A TENSOR-27 (Bruker, Germany) was used to determine the functional group of prepared activated carbon (FT-IR spectrum technique). Leco Model: 701 (Seoul, Korea) was used to analyze the thermal (TGA) behavior of the prepared activated carbon.

2.4. Life Cycle Assessment Compartments

In order to demonstrate significantly improved environmental performance, the compartments of LCA divided the process into four distinct steps.

2.5. Data Origin

The input/output data that were obtained were based on experiments involving AC production that were conducted at the lab scale. The existing framework includes processing waste material to obtain a final product. The disposal scenario of waste-based AC was excluded. The supply of resources, energy, and feedstock and their utilization were taken into consideration throughout the entire production process.

2.6. Goal and Scope Definition

The objective of this study was to produce one gram of AC as a functional unit from six grams of raw material, which extended the present study’s scope, and the ecological implications were investigated.

2.7. System Boundary

A set of criteria called the system boundary was designed specifically for the eight steps of the AC production process: (1) raw material collection, (2) washing, (3) drying, (4) crushing and grinding, (5) H3PO4 impregnation, (6) calcination, (7) neutralization, and (8) drying the final material. The life cycle framework does not incorporate the storage of waste since it is apparent.

2.8. Life Cycle Assessment

LCA methodology was implemented using OpenLCA 1.10.3 software, while ReCiPe Midpoint (H) was used for environmental impact assessment. LCA involves optimizing or modifying the process steps to identify environmental in adequacies by incorporating alternative sources. Life cycle inventory analysis (LCI) includes product stages, processes, waste types, system descriptions, and variables to estimate the material utilized in the study. Within the framework of LCA, input/output energy flows and raw materials are considered in reference to functional unit adaptation. As per existing environmental regulations, life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) provides the computation settings and appropriate procedures [29]. Impact assessment aims to assess the efficiency and importance of the existing system using environmental indicators. Interpretation facilitates decision making, conclusions, and recommendations premised on preceding reports. Interpretation also encompasses regional ecological strategies. Table 1 shows the inventory data for one gram of laboratory-scale AC production from six grams of Quercus alba.

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Scanning Electron Microscopy Analysis (SEM)

The SEM images in Figure 3a,b show that the raw Quercus alba had heterogeneous particles with different shapes and different sizes. No pores were present in the structure of the raw precursors. Figure 3c reveals that pores were formed when H3PO4 was used as the activating agent. As shown in Figure 3c, when the absorption time of the activation agent was 16 h, the pores were enlarged due to the heat generated by the exothermic reaction between H3PO4 and water. The macropores seem to be connected to mesopores to form irregular pores. As the absorption time of phosphoric acid was increased to 24 h, 48 h, and 72 h, as shown in Figure 3d–f, the intensity of the heat caused by the exothermic reaction was reduced with the passage of time, and only a small number of mesopores were observed in the particle.

3.2. EDX and BET Analysis

The change in the absorption time with H3PO4 chemical activation in Quercus reveals the change in carbon composition. The carbon content of Quercus alba was reduced as the absorption time of H3PO4 increased. The higher absorption time of H3PO4 was responsible for the reduced carbon composition. Carbon content decreased as the absorption time increased because with the passage of time, the exothermic reaction was fully accomplished [30]. The presence of oxygen in Quercus alba is due to the volatile compounds and their botanical species, such as furfural, decanal, vitispirane, terpineol, and nonamal [31].
The nutritional content of Quercus alba varies depending on the geographical location of the tree. It is mostly composed of protein, phosphoric acid, calcium, fat, fiber, and moisture content. The leaves have a calcium content that increases slowly as the growing season progresses. In the EDX analysis, Quercus alba and the prepared activated carbon showed a calcium presence due to the natural existence of calcium compounds [1]. In this study, the activated carbon was prepared at 500 °C. Calcium has a melting point of 842 °C. This is why the calcium was not fully evaporated and was still present in the activated carbon. For the complete removal of calcium from the activated carbon, a temperature of more than 842 °C is required. The presence of phosphoric acid is due to the use of H3PO4 as the activating agent. In addition, the results in Table 1 reveal that as the absorption time of the activation agent increased from 16 h to 72 h, the volume required for washing the biochar also increased. This indicates that as the absorption time of H3PO4 increased, more H3PO4 was absorbed into the sample, and a higher volume of water was required to maintain a neutral pH. Table 2 shows the EDX and BET results of the prepared activated carbon. In this study, the yield of the activated carbon prepared from the waste leaves of Quercus alba was roughly 17%. From 6 g of waste leaves of Quercus alba, 1 g of activated carbon was obtained.

3.3. X-Ray Diffraction Analysis

The XRD spectrum of the activated carbon prepared by H3PO4 is shown in Figure 4. Figure 4 shows peaks at 23°, signifying the presence of the crystalline carbonaceous structure of activated carbon [32]. One small peak at 15° was observed due to the turbostratic stacking of layers and the use of H3PO4 as the activating agent. A small peak at 43°further confirmed the presence of the crystalline carbonaceous structure of the activated carbon by using phosphoric acid [11,33].

3.4. Thermogravimetric Analysis

The overall TGA analysis of Quercus alba by H3PO4 activation agents is shown in Figure 5. H3PO4 promotes the breaking of lignocellulose linkages, which results in the early development of volatile chemicals [34]. The result reveals that the H3PO4-based activated carbon started to degrade at 300 °C and was fully degraded above 875 °C. The pore-forming mechanism of phosphoric acid is accomplished in the subsequent chemical reactions [35].
n H 3 P O 4 2 P n O 3 n + 1 + H n + n 1 H 2 O
2 H 3 P O 4 3 H 2 O + P 2 O 5
2 H 3 P O 4 H 2 O + H 2 P 2 O 7 2 + 2 H +
2 H 2 P 2 O 7 2 6 O 2 + P 4 + 2 H 2 O
2 P 2 O 5 + 5 C P 4 + 5 C O 2
P 2 O 5 l i q u i d P 2 O 5 g a s
According to the TGA graph, the weight loss behavior of activated carbon prepared by H3PO4 activation had the same order as the BET surface area (Table 2). The weight loss value of the 16 h absorption time (AC-Q-H-16) at 550 °C was 15.44% (100-84.56), and the surface area was 787.7 m2/g. The 24 h absorption time (AC-Q-H-24) had a weight loss value of 42.52% (100-57.48) and a surface area of 896.4 m2/g. The 48 h H3PO4 absorption time (AC-Q-H-48) revealed the highest weight loss value of 51.74% (100-48.26), and the surface area was observed as 943.2 m2/g. Finally, the 72 h absorption time (AC-Q-H-24) revealed a weight loss of 48.48% (100-51.52), and the surface area was 890.2 m2/g.

3.5. FT-IR Analysis

The surface functional groups of the prepared activated carbon were analyzed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), as shown in Figure 6. FT-IR analysis provides information on chemical bonds and decomposition and identifies the oxidation formations. The FT-IR results of H3PO4-based activated carbon revealed that bonds at wavenumbers of 1078 cm−1 and above 1100 cm−1 were attributed to C-O vibration. The presence of phosphorus and oxygen compounds (P-O-C) was observed at wavenumbers of 1200–1000 cm−1, consistent with the elemental analysis results. In addition, the bond at 1565 was assigned to C=C vibration [35,36].A very weak peak at wavenumbers between 2300 and 3000 cm−1 was attributable to vibration in the alkyne group [28].

3.6. Environmental Impact Assessment

Table 3 depicts the characterized ReCiPe midpoint (H) impact categories for the 1 g of AC produced from 6 g of waste leaves of Quercus alba, while Figure 7 shows the normalized values of the AC production at the laboratory scale. The analyzed case study shows that the impact categories related to toxicity (TETP, HNTP, HCTP, FETP, and METP) were particularly affected. The utilization of electrical energy (which contributes on average ≈ 90%) was ultimately accountable for toxicity-related impact categories. Along with distilled water (≈20%), electricity contributed≈70% of the FEP. Additionally, other impact indicators exhibiting lesser but still significant normalized impacts also emerged. However, with regard to Figure 8, the power utilized during laboratory procedures was the main cause of environmental impact, contributing an average of nearly 70% across all impact categories, with the maximum contribution to the impact category of freshwater ecotoxicity potential (≈97%) and the minimum contribution to land use potential (≈10%). Filter paper (≈1.2% overall), phosphoric acid (≈1.4% overall), and distilled water (≈9% overall) are other important contributors.
The associated environmental impacts with different AC samples variegates because activated carbon can be produced by either chemical [37] or physical [24] activation from different carbonaceous materials or by combining the two methods. In this study, LCA was performed on the basis of life cycle inventory with predictive data [38], utilizing analytical determination and experimental measurements without uncertainty consideration in resource utilization and emissions. This is an analysis simplification because information about uncertainty is necessary to support conclusions based on the results of LCA [39]. It is important to appropriately manage the uncertainty in LCA since under a probabilistic methodology, various studies on the same production chain may produce contradictory conclusions, which could result in a poor decision-making process [40,41]. The incorporation of stochastic analysis is necessary when developing an LCA that involves uncertainty analysis. This kind of assessment is usually performed using Latin hypercube and Monte Carlo sampling techniques, which need a distribution of the probability of the critical life cycle variables, e.g., energy consumption, chemical reagents, yield, flow, emissions, and adsorption capacity. However, it is not easy to incorporate uncertainty factors when producing AC using the LCA approach. This is because of the scarcity of information on the aforementioned parameters concerning the probability distribution in the literature. Hence, this gap in knowledge provides a potential opportunity in this area.
Researchers [25] assessed the environmental impacts of AC production from cocoa pods using cradle-to-gate LCA methodology. The authors found that electricity consumption during the laboratory steps affected most of the selected impacts categories. The effect of GWP was 4.63 kg CO2 eq, which was higher in this study. As most of the power used during laboratory-scale AC production comes from non-renewable sources, energy from renewable sources can reduce this effect. The authors concluded that power use during the laboratory steps affected most of the environmental impact categories. Another related study was conducted [9] using the steam activation method to produce AC from coconut shells at 900 °C. The authors found that electricity consumption during the laboratory steps affected most of the selected impact categories, particularly GWP and human toxicity. The authors also observed that the impacts of GWP and human toxicity were reduced significantly by using electrical energy from renewable sources.
Recently, researchers conducted gate-to-gate LCA for AC production from olive trees using H3PO4 as the activation agent. CML 2 baseline 2000 methodology was used for impact assessment, and OpenLCA 1.10.3 software was used for LCA modeling. The results showed that the impact of GWP and toxicity-related impact categories was higher (5.120 kg CO2 eq and 3.262 kg 1,4-DCB) than those in this study, which indicates that Quercus alba is the most feasible material for AC production. Table 4 shows the results compared with those from the existing literature in terms of the most identified impact categories.

4. Conclusions

The activated carbon prepared from waste leaves of Quercus alba showed that when the absorption time of activating agent was increased, the surface increased. FT-IR analysis of H3PO4 revealed the oxygen and phosphorus functionalities on the activated carbon, consistent with the elemental analysis results. The different absorption time of the H3PO4 activating agent was considered an important parameter for enhancing the properties of the prepared activated carbon. As the absorption time of phosphoric acid increased, the surface area increased until 48 h and then started to decline. Life cycle assessment was carried out in order to quantify the ecological implications associated with the laboratory-scale activated carbon production from wasted tree leaves of Quercus alba. The results demonstrated that the power used during the laboratory steps was the main cause of most of the toxicity-related impact categories and contributed an average of nearly 70% across all impact categories. Additionally, the utilization of distilled water contributed (≈9% overall), followed by phosphoric acid (≈1.4% overall) and filter paper (≈1.2% overall). In conclusion, controlling the key elemental process variables in AC manufacturing and the production process is not only important from an ecological and economic perspective, but it is also necessary for obtaining porous-structure carbon for water treatment and various other applications.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Resources, Visualization, Writing—original draft, Writing—review and editing, M.A. and H.H.S. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The authors would like to thank the KGSP (Korean Government Scholarship Program) for providing research scholarship funds (2019-37498), Seoul National University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The data are presented in the present research article.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank the Environmental Geochemical Research Lab, Seoul National University, Republic of Korea, for providing lab testing facilities.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Use of activated carbon in various applications.
Figure 1. Use of activated carbon in various applications.
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Figure 2. Preparation steps of activated carbon.
Figure 2. Preparation steps of activated carbon.
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Figure 3. SEM micrographs of activated carbon (a,b) from raw Quercus alba (c) 16 h, (d) 24 h, (e) 48 h, and (f) 72 h using H3PO4.
Figure 3. SEM micrographs of activated carbon (a,b) from raw Quercus alba (c) 16 h, (d) 24 h, (e) 48 h, and (f) 72 h using H3PO4.
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Figure 4. XRD analysis of activated carbon.
Figure 4. XRD analysis of activated carbon.
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Figure 5. TGA analysis of activated carbon.
Figure 5. TGA analysis of activated carbon.
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Figure 6. FT-IR analysis of activated carbon.
Figure 6. FT-IR analysis of activated carbon.
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Figure 7. Normalized ReCiPe Midpoint (H) impact categories for AC production from waste leaves of Quercus alba (FU: 1 g).
Figure 7. Normalized ReCiPe Midpoint (H) impact categories for AC production from waste leaves of Quercus alba (FU: 1 g).
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Figure 8. ReCiPe Midpoint (H) characterized percentage contribution of the AC production from waste leaves of Quercus alba (FU: 1 g).
Figure 8. ReCiPe Midpoint (H) characterized percentage contribution of the AC production from waste leaves of Quercus alba (FU: 1 g).
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Table 1. Life cycle inventory of waste leaves of Quercus alba conversion to activated carbon.
Table 1. Life cycle inventory of waste leaves of Quercus alba conversion to activated carbon.
Sample IDInitial Biomass (Grams)Grinding/SievingChemical ActivationWashing/Oven DryingFinal AC (Grams)
ACQ-H-166Power (kWh)0.3H3PO4 (mL)3H2O (mL)17521
H2O (mL)800Power (kWh)11.9Filter paper2
H2O (mL)5.2Power (kWh)6
ACQ-H-246Power (kWh)0.3H3PO4 (mL)3H2O (mL)18411
H2O (mL)800Power (kWh)11.9Filter paper2
H2O (mL)5.2Power (kWh)6
ACQ-H-486Power (kWh)0.3H3PO4 (mL)3H2O (mL)21531
H2O (mL)800Power (kWh)11.9Filter paper3
H2O (mL)5.2Power (kWh)6
ACQ-H-726Power (kWh)0.3H3PO4 (mL)3H2O (mL)27561
H2O (mL)800Power (kWh)11.9Filter paper4
H2O (mL)5.2Power (kWh)6
Table 2. EDX and BET analysis of prepared AC.
Table 2. EDX and BET analysis of prepared AC.
Sample IDActivation Time (h)Pyrolysis Temperature (°C)Pyrolysis Time (h)Elements Presence
(Weight %)
BET Surface Area m2/g
CarbonOxygenPhosphorCalcium
Quercus alba 34.7658.320.006.92
ACQ-H-1616500360.1926.4511.062.30787.7
ACQ-H-2424500353.3229.4113.154.12890.2
ACQ-H-4848500352.7628.9212.514.71943.2
ACQ-H-7272500354.5630.0212.003.43896.4
Table 3. Characterized ReCiPe Midpoint (H) impact categories for AC production from waste leaves of Quercus alba (FU: 1 g).
Table 3. Characterized ReCiPe Midpoint (H) impact categories for AC production from waste leaves of Quercus alba (FU: 1 g).
Impact CategoryValueUnit
(PMFP) Fine particulate matter formation potential0.01kg PM2.5 eq
(FETP) Freshwater ecotoxicity potential1.10kg 1,4-DCB
(WCP) Water consumption potential0.03m3
(IRP) Ionizing radiation potential0.80kBq Co-60 eq
(ODP) Stratospheric ozone depletion potential0.00kg CFC11 eq
(LUP) Land use potential0.30m2 a crop eq
(METP) Marine ecotoxicity potential1.35kg 1,4-DCB
(MEP) Marine eutrophication potential0.00kg N eq
(TAP) Terrestrial acidification potential0.02kg SO2 eq
(OFTP) Ozone formation, Terrestrial ecosystem potential0.01kg NOx eq
(TETP) Terrestrial ecotoxicity potential30.12kg 1,4-DCB
(FSP) Fossil resource scarcity potential1.18kg oil eq
(GWP) Global warming potential3.61kg CO2 eq
(FEP) Freshwater eutrophication potential0.00kg P eq
(MSP) Mineral resource scarcity potential0.81kg Cu eq
(OFHP) Ozone formation, Human health potential0.01kg NOx eq
(HNTP) Human non-carcinogenic toxicity potential4.30kg 1,4-DCB
(HCTP) Human carcinogenic toxicity potential0.21kg 1,4-DCB
Table 4. Comparison of environmental impacts with existing literature.
Table 4. Comparison of environmental impacts with existing literature.
Raw MaterialImpact CategoriesValueUnitReferences
Cocoa podsGlobal warming potential4.63kg CO2 eq[25]
Acidification Potential0.03kg SO2 eq
Human Toxicity Potential0.27 (carcinogenic)kg 1,4-DCB
6.35 (non-carcinogenic)
Coconut shellsGlobal warming potential2.1 × 10−11 (normalized)kg CO2 eq[24]
Acidification Potential4.1 × 10−11 (normalized)kg SO2 eq
Human Toxicity Potential1.2 × 10−10 (normalized)kg 1,4-DCB
Olive treeGlobal warming potential5.210kg CO2 eq[11]
Acidification Potential0.100kg SO2 eq
Human Toxicity Potential3.262kg 1,4-DCB
Quercus albaGlobal warming potential3.61kg CO2 eqThis work
Acidification Potential0.02kg SO2 eq
Human Toxicity Potential0.21 (carcinogenic)kg 1,4-DCB
4.30 (non-carcinogenic)
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Amin, M.; Shah, H.H. Effect of Absorption Time for the Preparation of Activated Carbon from Wasted Tree Leaves of Quercus alba and Investigating Life Cycle Assessment. C 2022, 8, 57. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/c8040057

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Amin M, Shah HH. Effect of Absorption Time for the Preparation of Activated Carbon from Wasted Tree Leaves of Quercus alba and Investigating Life Cycle Assessment. C. 2022; 8(4):57. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/c8040057

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Amin, Muhammad, and Hamad Hussain Shah. 2022. "Effect of Absorption Time for the Preparation of Activated Carbon from Wasted Tree Leaves of Quercus alba and Investigating Life Cycle Assessment" C 8, no. 4: 57. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/c8040057

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