Abstract
A carbon-modified attapulgite composite (C-AATP@CTAB) was synthesized via the hydrothermal method using citric acid as the carbon source and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) as a surface modifier for efficient rhodamine B (Rh-B) removal. Carbon modification elevated the composite's specific surface area (212 m(2)/g) and negative surface charge (-38.21 mV), significantly enhancing dye adsorption capacity to 666.66 mg/g-nearly double that of unmodified ATP variants (360.4-386.8 mg/g). Kinetic studies confirmed pseudo-second-order adsorption kinetics, attributed to hydrogen bonding and van der Waals interactions between Rh-B and the composite. Under photo-Fenton conditions, C-AATP@CTAB achieved 99.8% Rh-B degradation within 20 min, demonstrating superior catalytic performance in heterogeneous Fenton/photo-Fenton systems. This work establishes a low-cost, high-efficiency adsorbent-catalyst hybrid derived from low-grade attapulgite, offering promising avenues for sustainable wastewater treatment.