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In relation to this article, we declare that there is no conflict of interest.
Publication history
Received April 8, 2025
Revised September 28, 2025
Accepted October 17, 2025
Available online January 1, 1970
articles This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/bync/3.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Microwave-Assisted Treatment of Reactive Dyes in Wastewater: Kinetics and Efficiency

Department of Environmental and Safety Engineering, Dayeh University 1CIRTech Institute, HUTECH University 2Institute for Environmental Toxin and Emerging- Contaminant Research, Cheng Shiu University 3Faculty of Engineering and Technology
manhhakg@sgu.edu.vn
Korean Journal of Chemical Engineering, February 2026, 43(3), 691-706(16)
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11814-025-00584-0

Abstract

The treatment of dye-contaminated wastewater, particularly from reactive dyes, remains a major environmental challenge

due to their high solubility and chemical stability in aquatic systems. This study evaluates the performance of microwave-

assisted advanced oxidation processes (MW-AOPs) for the degradation of selected reactive dyes, namely Remazole

Black-GR (RBGR), Sunfix Red S3B (S3B), Sunzol Blue RS (SBRS) and Sunazol Turquoise Blue G (DTB), under optimized

operational conditions. Experiments were conducted at pH 3.0 ± 0.2, aeration rate of 1.5 L/min, microwave power

of 275 W, treatment time of 60 min and initial dye concentrations of 100 mg/L. Preliminary coagulation–flocculation

tests achieved only 20.18–24.83% removal of RBGR, S3B and SBRS, confirming the limited efficiency of conventional

treatment processes. In contrast, MW-AOPs achieved substantial pollutant reductions, with COD removal efficiencies of

66.85% for SBRS, 58.28% for DTB, 53.47% for S3B and 57.73% for RBGR. Although BOD₅ removal was less pronounced,

the post-treatment BOD₅/COD ratio increased significantly, indicating enhanced biodegradability, particularly for

S3B. Kinetic analysis showed that dye degradation followed a second-order model, with the best fit observed for SBRS.

Principal component analysis (PCA) further revealed strong correlations between COD and BOD₅ removal and distinct

degradation behaviors among the dyes. Notably, complete color removal of RBGR was achieved within 20 min. The findings

highlight MW-AOPs as a promising standalone technology for the effective degradation of reactive dyes, offering

high efficiency and operational simplicity compared with conventional methods.

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