THE EFFICIENCY OF POMELO
(Citrus maxima) PEEL AS A
NATURAL OIL SPILL REMEDIATION
AGENT
Researchers:
Crystalen Barcela
Alejandra Soliven
Mr. Jason O. Salvadora
Subject Teacher
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I
Introduction
Nowadays, oil spill is one of the most serious pollutants
that have negative effects on the ecosystem and marine life.
Environmentalists face major challenges in the treatment of
spills and in developing an alternative product with low cost.
Among all different sorbents, agriculture waste is preferred as
an oil cleanup technology due to its biodegradation and
buoyancy.
Environment friendly absorbents for oil spill cleanup have
become popular over the last few years like natural fibers such
as cotton, wheat straws etc. Fruit peel waste (FPW) is
abundantly available from the agricultural and food processing
industry and has been studied in recent past as an absorbent.
FPW has a great potential in waste water treatment due to its
abundant and cheap availability. Pomelo peel (PP), as one of
the well-known agricultural wastes, is cost-effective and
environmental friendly.
This study will investigate the effectiveness of
pomelo peel, a substitutional material from agricultural wastes
as a natural oil spill remediation agent.
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Statement of the Problem
General Problems:
The study aims to investigate the effectiveness of pomelo
peel as a natural oil spill remediation agent.
Specific Problems:
To test the effectiveness of Pomelo Peel as natural oil
spill remediation in terms of:
a) Amount of oil absorbed
b) Duration of time of absorption
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Scopes and Delimitations
Scopes
Our study aims to investigate the effectiveness of pomelo
peel, a substitutional material from agricultural wastes as a
natural oil spill remediation agent. The extent of the area of
our study is to test the effectiveness of (PP)in terms of amount
of oil absorb and the duration of time of absorption.
We will use pomelo peel because it is an agricultural waste
and has been studied in recent past as an absorbent. The outer
part of the peel will be separated from the inner, spongy one,
and the latter will be utilized.
Delimitations
The limitations of our study is, it only remove the oil
from seawater specifically the oil in the water surface. It does
not cover the removal of the toxic chemicals/ contaminants in
the water itself.
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Theoretical Framework
Density is defined as mass per unit volume. Weight density
means weight per unit volume. In c.g.s. units, density is in grams
per cubic centimeter. The weight density (seldom used here) would
be in what units? In English engineering practice, it is
customary to specify the weight density; for fresh water this is
about 62 lb/ft3.
Specific Gravity is the ratio of the density of a substance
to the density of water, or it is the ratio of the weight of a
body to the weight of an equal volume of water. Since the density
of water is very close to one gram/cm3 at ordinary temperatures,
density and specific gravity are numerically equal in c.g.s. units.
(Specific gravity, however, does not have dimensions).
Archimedes’ Principle (which is derivable from mechanics)
states that a body immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force
equal to the weight of the displaced fluid.
Consider now a body which sinks in water. If its “true”
weight in air is Wa, while its apparent weight is Ww when it is
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hung from the balance by a thread, but submerged in water, then
its buoyancy is (Wa -Ww). This buoyancy is due to a volume of
water equal to the volume of the submerged solid
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Conceptual Paradigm
1.Preparation of the
materials.
Investigate the 2. Collection and preparation Pomelo peel as an
effectiveness of of the pomelo peel. effective oil
pomelo peel as a spill
3. Drying of the pomelo peel.
natural oil spill remediation.
remediation. 4. Making of the two set-up.
5. Administering of the
product.
6. Measuring of the oil
absorbed.
7.Data collection.
Figure 1. Conceptual Paradigm
The input of this study comprises the effectiveness of pomelo
peel as a natural oil spill remediation, determine the absorption
capacity of the pomelo peel and the duration of the absorption.
The process includes the methods and procedures in
investigating the effectiveness of the pomelo peel as natural oil
spill remediation agent, compare the pomelo peel from commercially
available product in terms of the capacity and duration of
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absorption. Observations and data will be gathered and presented
through statistical analysis specifically One-way Anova.
The output of our study is to know the efficiency of the
pomelo peel as a natural oil spill remediation.
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Assumptions
This study has an alternative hypothesis that there is no
significant difference in the results among the two set-ups. The
researchers expect that the experimental treatment given the
pomelo peel as an oil absorbent will be as effective, or much
more effective than the commercially available oil spill
absorber.
Hypothesis
Ho: There is no significant difference in the results
among the two set-up.
H1 : There is significant difference in the results among
the two set-up.
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Definition of Terms
Oil spill- An oil spill is the release of a liquid petroleum
hydrocarbon into the marine ecosystem, due to human activity, and
is a form of pollution. The term is usually given to marine oil
spills, where oil is released into the ocean or coastal waters,
but spills may occur on land.
Biodegradation- Biodegradation is the process by which organic
substances are broken down into smaller compounds by enzymes
produced by living microbial organisms in biochemical processes.
Buoyancy- the tendency of a body to float or to rise when submerged
in a fluid.
Efficacy- the quality of being successful in producing an intended
result; effectiveness.
Remediation- the action of remedying something, in particular or
reversing or stopping environmental damage.
Oil Spill Absorbent Pad - are pads and booms that can be quickly
deployed for spill response.
Pomelo- the pomelo Citrus maxima is the largest citrus fruit from
the Rutaceae family.
Peel- the outer covering or rind of a fruit or vegetable.
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II
Review of Related Literature and Studies
On the study entitled” An environmentally friendly carbon
aerogels derived from waste pomelo peels for the removal of organic
pollutants/oils.” a novel family of biomass-based carbon aerogels
was fabricated through the hydrothermal carbonization, freeze-
drying and pyrolysis process using waste pomelo peels as the
precursors. In this study, it was found out that the carbon
aerogels derived from waste pomelo peels had excellent sorption
ability for a variety of organic pollutants/oils and the sorption
ability dropped slightly as the calcination temperature increased.
In addition, the sorbent could be easily regenerated by simple
physical treatments and kept a high sorption rate after five
sorption-regeneration cycles (Lin Zhu et al.).
As stated by Wenbo Chaia et al., (2015) based on pomelo peel
(PP), two new kinds of oil sorbents were prepared by using acetic
anhydride and styrene. AP and SP has a better oil sorption capacity
than that of RP for diesel and lubricating oil, also SP had better
oil sorption capacity than AP. The results of this study indicated
that AP and SP, especially SP could be used as the substitute for
non-biodegradable oil sorption materials.
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On the study of Guangyu Shi et al., (2019) oil/water separation
is a field of high significance as it might efficiently resolve
the contamination of industrial oily wastewater and other
oil/water pollution. In this paper, an environmentally-friendly
hydrophobic aerogel with high porosity and low density was
successfully synthesized with renewable pomelo peels (PPs) as
precursors. Typically, a series of sponge aerogels (HPSA-0, HPSA-
1 and HPSA-2) were facilely prepared via high-speed dispersion,
freeze-drying and silanization with methyltrimethoxysilane.
Indeed, the physical properties of aerogel such as density and
pore diameter could be tailored by different additives (filter
paper fibre and polyvinyl alcohol). Hence, their physico-chemical
properties including internal morphology and chemical structure
were characterized in detail by Fourier transform infrared,
Brunauer–Emmett–Teller, X-ray diffraction, scanning electron
microscope, Thermal gravimetric analyzer (TG) etc. Moreover, the
adsorption capacity was further determined and the results
revealed that the PP-based aerogels presented excellent adsorption
performance for a wide range of oil products and/or organic
solvents (crude oil 49.8 g g−1, soya bean oil 62.3 g g−1,
chloroform 71.3 g g−1 etc.). The corresponding cyclic tests showed
the absorption capacity decreased slightly from 94.66% to 93.82%
after 10 consecutive cycles, indicating a high recyclability.
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In related study of Junchen Zou et al., (2015) magnetic pomelo
peel (MPP) with high oil sorption capacity was prepared by
solvothermal method. The characteristics of MPP were manifested by
FTIR, SEM, XRD, and vibrating sample magnetometry. Adsorption
kinetics and equilibrium of diesel from aqueous solution on MPP
were studied in a batch process. The kinetic studies showed good
correlation coefficients for the pseudo-second-order kinetic
model, and the equilibrium process was well described by the
Freundlich isotherm model. The maximum sorption capacity of MPP
was 27.98 g/g for diesel at 30°C. The results in this study
indicated that MPP was an attractive candidate for removing oil
from aqueous solutions.
On the other study of Junchen Zou et al., (2014) pomelo peel
(PP), was tested for its ability to remove spilled oil from
simulated seawater. The experiments were conducted to evaluate the
oil sorption capacities of PP modified by fatty acids (oleic acid
and stearic acid). The effects of temperature, salinity, and
oscillation frequency on the oil sorption capacity of the PP were
studied in simulated seawater. It was found that the oil sorption
capacity of the PP was greatly enhanced by the surface
modification. The results showed that the PP modified by oleic
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acid had better oil sorption capacity than that treated with
stearic acid. The sorption kinetics of unmodified and modified PP
were well described by the pseudo-second-order kinetic model. The
results indicated that PP was an attractive candidate for removing
oily pollutants from seawater.
State of the Art
The reviewed related studies described Pomelo (Citrus maxima)
peel as one of the well-known agricultural wastes, is cost-
effective and environmentally friendly. It was tested as an oil
sorbent and some studies used it as a precursors in absorbing the
oil and treated it with chemicals to increase the rate of
absorption.
Our study is unique because they mostly use chemicals that
may affect the marine life in the process of treating the oil
spill. They used raw pomelo peel without applying any method to
absorb the oil. This study will focus on the capacity of the
pomelo peel in absorbing the oil spill without any additives but
we will apply a method that will increase the rate of
absorption.
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III
Research Design
Research Design and Treatment
The Static Group Design is applicable in the study. Two
groups will be used but only one will be given the experimental
treatment.
EXPERIMENTAL TREATMENT OBSERVATION
GROUP
CONTROLLED
GROUP
OBSERVATION
Figure 2. Research Design and Treatment
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Procedures
PREPARATION COLLECTION AND
DRYING OF THE
PREPARATION OF
OF THE POMELO PEEL
THE POMELO PEEL
MATERIALS
MEASURING OF ADMINISTERING MAKING OF THE
THE OIL OF THE TWO SET-UP
ABSORBED PRODUCT
DATA
COLLECTION
Figure 3. Methodology
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Preparation of the Materials
Gather and prepare all of the materials which
will be utilized in this study. The primary material
needed are the Pomelo Peel (PP), 2L of crude oil, basin,
commercially available oil spill sorbent, weighing scale ,and
sea water.
Collection and Preparation of the Pomelo Peel
Since the pomelo peel is an agricultural waste, we are
going to ask some pomelo vendors to give us pomelo peel. After
collecting, the outer part of the peel will be separated from
the inner, spongy one.
Drying of the Pomelo Peel
The Pomelo Peel will be placed under the sun and will be
left until it is fully dried. It will later on be cut out to a
certain size following the dimensions of the commercially
available oil spill sorbent.
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Making of the Set-up
There will be two basin and both will be given the same
amount of seawater and crude oil. The first set-up will be the
experimental set-up and the other will be the controlled set-up.
Administering of the Product
The pomelo peel will be weighed according to the mass of
the commercially available oil spill absorbent. The purpose is
to be able to put the exact amount of both products which aim to
remove 1L of crude oil in the sea water set-up. Then, both the
pomelo peel and the commercially available oil spill absorbent
will be placed on the set-up on the same time and timer will be
set to determine the duration of time of each of the products’
absorption.
Measuring of the oil absorbed
The two products (the pomelo peel and commercially
available oil spill absorbent)will be weighed once more after
applying the treatment to determine the oil which was absorbed
by both.
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Data Collection
Table 1. Duration of time of absorption
Duration of time
Trial 1 Trial 2 Trial 3 AVERAGE
Experimental set-
up(PP)
Controlled set-
up(Commercially
available oil spill
absorbent)
This table will show the two sets of data presenting the
result of using pomelo peel (experimental set-up) and the
commercially available oil spill absorbent (controlled set-up).
For each set-up, the table will show results of three trials
indicating the time it took for each set-up to absorb the oil
spilled in the water.
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Table 2. Mass Of The Product Before And After The
Experimentation
Experimental Controlled set-
set-up(PP) up(Commercially
available oil spill
absorbent)
Mass(Before the Trial 1
Experimentation)
Trial 2
Trial 3
AVERAGE
Mass(After the Trial 1
Experimentation)
Trial 2
Trial 3
AVERAGE
This table will show the masses of the experimental set up
and controlled groups’ materials utilized. Three trials will be
done for each and the average of those will be seen in the table
as well.
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Data Analysis
To analyze the data, we will use One-way Anova to
investigate the effectiveness of the pomelo peel.
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References
1. Lin Zhu et al., (2016). An environmentally friendly carbon
aerogels derived from waste pomelo peels for the removal of
organic pollutants/oils.
Retrieved from: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.micromeso.2016.12.033
2. Wenbo Chaia et al., (2015). Pomelo peel modified with
acetic anhydride and styrene as new sorbents for removal of oil
pollution.
Retrieved from: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carbpol.2015.06.060
3. Guangyu Shi et al., (2019). Controllable synthesis of
pomelo peel-based aerogel and its application in adsorption of
oil/organic pollutants.
Retrieved from:
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rsos.181823
4. Junchen Zou et al., (2015). Magnetic pomelo peel as a new
absorption material for oil-polluted water.
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Retrieved from:
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/19443994.2015.104995
5. Junchen Zou et al., (2014). Sorption of oil from simulated
seawater by fatty acid-modified pomelo peel.
Retrieved from:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/271874192_Sorption_of
_oil_from_simulated_seawater by_fatty_acid-
modified_pomelo_peel
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