In this study, the removal of Reactive Red 120, a dye commonly present in textile wastewater, was investigated using Ferric Chloride (FeCl₃) as a coagulant. Process optimization was carried out through Response Surface Methodology based on a four-factor experimental design, considering initial pH (2–12), coagulant dose (100–500 mg/L), mixing speed (50–250 rpm), and initial dye concentration (25–250 mg/L). A second-order polynomial model was developed and evaluated by ANOVA to assess the individual and interactive effects of these parameters on color removal efficiency. The maximum removal efficiency of 96.28% was obtained at pH 3, coagulant dose 400 mg/L, mixing speed 100 rpm, and dye concentration 200 mg/L. The Response Surface Methodology model showed good agreement with the experimental data and predicted a theoretical maximum efficiency of 98.33% under optimized conditions. Overall, the results confirm that FeCl₃-based coagulation, when optimized by Response Surface Methodology, is a robust and scalable pretreatment option for textile wastewater, capable of achieving near-complete decolorization and providing practical operating ranges for implementation.
Reactive red 120 Response surface methodology Parameter optimization Color removal FeCl₃ Jar test
Ethics committee approval was not required for this study because of there was no study on animals or humans.
In this study, the removal of Reactive Red 120, a dye commonly present in textile wastewater, was investigated using Ferric Chloride (FeCl₃) as a coagulant. Process optimization was carried out through Response Surface Methodology based on a four-factor experimental design, considering initial pH (2–12), coagulant dose (100–500 mg/L), mixing speed (50–250 rpm), and initial dye concentration (25–250 mg/L). A second-order polynomial model was developed and evaluated by ANOVA to assess the individual and interactive effects of these parameters on color removal efficiency. The maximum removal efficiency of 96.28% was obtained at pH 3, coagulant dose 400 mg/L, mixing speed 100 rpm, and dye concentration 200 mg/L. The Response Surface Methodology model showed good agreement with the experimental data and predicted a theoretical maximum efficiency of 98.33% under optimized conditions. Overall, the results confirm that FeCl₃-based coagulation, when optimized by Response Surface Methodology, is a robust and scalable pretreatment option for textile wastewater, capable of achieving near-complete decolorization and providing practical operating ranges for implementation.
Reactive red 120 Response surface methodology Parameter optimization Color removal FeCl₃ Jar test
Ethics committee approval was not required for this study because of there was no study on animals or humans.
Primary Language | English |
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Subjects | Clean Production Technologies |
Journal Section | Research Articles |
Authors | |
Early Pub Date | September 11, 2025 |
Publication Date | September 15, 2025 |
Submission Date | August 16, 2025 |
Acceptance Date | September 9, 2025 |
Published in Issue | Year 2025 Volume: 8 Issue: 5 |