| Literature DB >> 32829222 |
Xin Zhao1, Yanyang Zhang2, Siyuan Pan1, Xiaolin Zhang3, Weiming Zhang3, Bingcai Pan3.
Abstract
The urgent need for eutrophication control motivated the development of many novel adsorbents for enhanced phosphate polishing removal. Among these, zirconium-based nanomaterial was regarded as an effective kind because of its ability to bind phosphate specifically via inner-sphere complexation. In this study, we proposed a new strategy to improve the efficiency of zirconium oxides (HZO) nanoparticles by immobilizing them onto a gel-type anion exchange resin covalently attached with ammonium groups, denoted as HZO@N201. A previously developed macro-porous polymeric nanocomposite HZO@D201 was used for comparison. The immobilized nanoparticles in HZO@N201 were well dispersed in the gel matrix, manifesting smaller particle size and richer surface hydroxyl groups in comparison to HZO@D201. As a result of the structural merits in collective, HZO@N201 not only exhibited superior phosphate adsorptive capacity and affinity towards phosphate to HZO@D201, but also facilitate phosphate diffusion, based on isotherm, pH and kinetic tests. Mechanistic study by XPS and 31P SS-NMR substantiated the selective phosphate adsorption pathway as the formation of inner-sphere complexes by HZO@N201, which exhibited enhanced reactivity than HZO@D201. Lastly, fixed-bed runs of HZO@N201 was conducted, achieving an effective treatable volume of 2000 BV, which was 600 BV more than HZO@D201. Additional adsorption-regeneration cycle confirmed its reusability and potential for practical application. We believe the gel-type polymeric host could facilitate the formation and dispersion of smaller sized nanoparticles, exposing more surface hydroxyl groups highly accessible to phosphate. The results of this paper offer insights to a new strategy for immobilization of functional nanoparticles aiming at enhanced adsorptive removal of phosphate.Entities:
Keywords: Adsorption; Gel-type polymer; Nanocomposite; Phosphate; Zirconium oxides
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32829222 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.127938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086