| Literature DB >> 35425374 |
Jong Hyuk Jeon1, Ana Belen Cueva Sola1,2, Jin-Young Lee1,2, Janardhan Reddy Koduru3, Rajesh Kumar Jyothi1,2.
Abstract
Vanadium and tungsten ion adsorption and desorption characteristics and separation conditions were investigated using a simple porous anion-exchange resin. Initially, systematic experimental research was performed using synthetic aqueous vanadium and tungsten solutions. To evaluate the vanadium and tungsten (50-500 mg L-1) isotherm parameters, adsorption was performed at pH 7.0 using 0.5 g of ion-exchange resin at 303 K for 24 h. Well-known adsorption models such as Langmuir, Freundlich, and Temkin were used. Vanadium was desorbed from the resin using HCl and NaOH solutions. In contrast, tungsten was not desorbed by the HCl solution, which enabled the separation of the two ions. The desorption reaction reached equilibrium within 30 min of its start, yielding over 90% desorption. We investigated the adsorption mechanism and resin stability with the aid of spectroscopic and microscopic analysis, as well as adsorption results. The applicability and feasibility of the resin was tested via recovery of both metals from real spent catalysts. The applicability and reusability results indicated that the resin can be used for more than five cycles with an efficacy of over 90%. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35425374 PMCID: PMC8979341 DOI: 10.1039/d1ra05253e
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Structure of Lewatit Monoplus MP600 resin.
The physical and chemical characteristics of Lewatit Monoplus MP600 (resin)
| Characteristics of the resin | Remarks |
|---|---|
| Trade name of the resin | MP 600 |
| Supplier | Lanxess, Germany |
| Ionic form as shipped | Cl− |
| Functional group | Quaternary amine, type II |
| Matrix | Cross linked polystyrene |
| Structure | Macroporous |
| Appearance | Beige, opaque |
| Uniformity coefficient (max.) | 1.1 |
| Mean bead size (mm) | 0.6 (±0.05) |
| Bulk density (±5%) (g L−1) | 630 |
| Density (approx. g mL−1) | 1.10 |
| Water retention (wt%) | 5560 |
| Total capacity (min. eq. L−1) | 1.1 |
| Volume change (Cl → OH) (max. vol%) | 12 |
| Stability (at pH-range) | 0 to 14 |
| Storability of product (max. year) | 2 |
| Storability temperature range (°C) | −20 to +40 |
| BET surface area of resin | 22.125 m2 g−1 |
| Single point surface area at | 21.272 m2 g−1 |
| Langmuir surface area | 32.355 m2 g−1 |
| Average pore volume | 0.1434 cm3 g−1 |
| Average pore size | 25.928 nm |
Fig. 2(A) SEM images of the source resin along with metal ions adsorption and desorption conditions ((a1–a3) SEM pictures are before adsorption (raw resin), (b1–b3) SEM pictures are after adsorption and (c1–c3) SEM pictures are after desorption); (B) XRD pattern of the source resin along with title metal ions adsorption and desorption conditions; (C) FT-IR pattern of the source resin along with title metal ions adsorption and desorption conditions.
Fig. 3(A) Effect of initial pH on the adsorption of vanadium and tungsten on MP600, (B) effect of temperature on the adsorption of vanadium and tungsten (experimental conditions for pH effect: initial pH range is 1 to 14, temperature at 303 K, initial concentration of the metals are V = 500 mg L−1 and W = 500 mg L−1, agitation rate is 200 rpm, volume is 100 mL, resin dose is 0.5 g, reaction time is 1440 min and experimental conditions for kinetic study is: temperature ranging 293 to 313 K, initial concentration of the metals are V = 120 mg L−1 and W = 120 mg L−1, agitation rate is 200 rpm, volume is 100 mL, resin dose is 0.1 g).
Isotherm parameters of vanadium and tungsten (50 to 500 mg L−1) adsorption processa
| Langmuir | Freundlich | Temkin | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Pearson's correlation coefficient, |
| 1/ |
| Pearson's correlation coefficient, | Δ |
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| Pearson's correlation coefficient, | |
| V | 75.301 | 1.564 | 0.974 | 0.993 | 53.469 | 0.078 | 0.644 | 0.845 | 3.337 × 102 | 3.786 × 107 | 0.770 | 0.877 |
| W | 69.160 | 7.692 | 0.933 | 0.982 | 52.869 | 0.101 | 0.946 | 0.977 | 8.149 × 107 | 2.402 × 109 | 0.976 | 0.988 |
Experimental conditions: initial pH is 7.0 using 0.5 g of ion exchange resin, temperature at 303 K and stirring is 200 rpm, reaction time is 1440 min, volume of the aqueous solution is 100 mL.
Kinetic parameters of vanadium and tungsten (500 mg L−1) adsorption at pH 7.0 using 0.5 g of ion exchange resin and stirring at 200 rpm and different temperaturea
| Metal | Temperature, K | Pseudo 1st order model | Pseudo 2nd order model | Experimental, | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Vanadium | 293 | 5.97 × 10−3 | 33.418 | 0.922 | 8.06 × 10−4 | 63.412 | 3.244 | 0.999 | 62.460 |
| 303 | 3.74 × 10−3 | 22.365 | 0.454 | 1.31 × 10−3 | 67.340 | 5.953 | 0.999 | 68.060 | |
| 313 | 4.45 × 10−3 | 23.573 | 0.731 | 1.47 × 10−3 | 78.003 | 8.959 | 0.999 | 77.890 | |
| Tungsten | 293 | 4.16 × 10−3 | 11.559 | 0.453 | 5.54 × 10−3 | 78.247 | 33.887 | 0.999 | 78.510 |
| 303 | 5.44 × 10−3 | 15.678 | 0.737 | 5.88 × 10−3 | 74.906 | 33.014 | 0.999 | 76.250 | |
| 313 | 1.57 × 10−3 | 7.162 | 0.102 | −7.28 × 10−3 | 69.396 | −35.075 | 0.999 | 73.470 | |
Experimental conditions: initial pH is 7.0 using 0.1 g of ion exchange resin, temperature varied from 293 to 303 K, stirring is 200 rpm, volume of the aqueous solution is 100 mL, concentration of the metals in feed solution is 120 mg L−1 of vanadium (or) tungsten.
Thermodynamic results for adsorption of tungsten and vanadium[32–34]a
| Thermodynamic parameter | Name of the metal | |
|---|---|---|
| Vanadium | Tungsten | |
| Δ | 19.39 | −1.78 |
| Δ | 156.23 | 101.21 |
| Δ | −26.39 | −31.40 |
| Δ | −27.95 | −32.45 |
| Δ | −29.51 | −33.45 |
Experimental conditions: initial pH is 7.0 using 0.1 g of ion exchange resin, temperature varied from 293 to 303 K, stirring is 200 rpm, volume of the aqueous solution is 100 mL, concentration of the metals in feed solution is 120 mg L−1 of vanadium (or) tungsten.
Fig. 4The desorption rate of vanadium and tungsten for concentrations of desorbing solution (a) HCl (b) NaOH (experimental conditions: aqueous solution ranging from 1.0 to 3.0 mol L−1 of HCl and NaOH solutions, temperature at 303 K, agitation rate is 200 rpm, volume is 100 mL, resin dose is 0.5 g).
Fig. 5Application and recycling capacity of the resin (a) represents the total proposed flowsheet of the spent SCR catalysts processing, (b) represents the adsorption of the title metals tested for five cycles, (c) represents the desorption of the title metals tested for five cycles, (d) represents the overall recovery of the title metals tested for five cycles, (e) represents the recycling capacity of the resin for five cycles (experimental conditions for adsorption or desorption: temperature at 303 K, initial concentration of the metals are V = 100 mg L−1 and W = 1000 mg L−1, agitation rate is 200 rpm, volume is 100 mL, resin dose is 0.5 g, reaction time is 1440 min).
Comparison of the present developed method with earlier reported literature on vanadium (or) tungsten adsorption studies
| Name of the resin (or) adsorbent (or) sorbent | Name of the Metal (s) | Remarks | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amidoxime resin | Ga, V, Al | Vanadium was maximum adsorbed 26.32 mg g; at 50 °C temperature with 12 mol L−1 of NaOH solution was able to eluted 50% of vanadium |
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| Poly(styrene-divinylbenzene) (D860) resin and cross-linked acrylic acid (D314) resin | V, Al, Fe, P | Selective extraction of vanadium from 2000 mg L−1 of feed, eluted the 5505 mg L−1 after eight cycles of process with 30 mol L−1 of H2SO4 at 20 min time was reported |
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| Fabricated resin made with D314 (N(CH3)2 functional groups and cross-linked acrylate structure) and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) or activated carbon (AC) | V, Al, Fe, P, Si | D314 with activated carbon proved better ion selectivity |
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| Herein HZrO@D201, an adsorbent with decoration of nanosized hydrous zirconium oxide (HZrO) on anion exchange resin D201 | V, Cl−, NO3 −, SO42−, PO43− | V( |
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| Resin 201*7 | V, NH4+, Si, Al, Fe, Ca, Mg, K, Na | 99% of vanadium from 106 mg L−1 of feed solution was adsorbed with 1.6 g L−1 of resin at pH 6 to 8, temperature, 40 °C adsorption time requires 20 min (other associated elements were adsorbed less than 10%) |
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| Anion exchange resins (D201, D301, D314) and cation exchange resin (D860) were fabricated with activated carbon (AC) | V | D860/AC fabricated resin shown the highest adsorption capacity for V( |
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| The macro-porous resin D301 (analog to Amberlite IRA-9) | W, Mo | The resin D301 showed good selectivity in between title metals such as W and Mo |
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| The macro polyhydroxy chelating resin D403 (resembling Amberlite IRC-743) | W, Mo | W Adsorption was fits the Freundlich model, where as other metal Mo adsorption was fit Henry model. The reaction was endothermic |
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| Lewatit Monoplus MP600 | V, W | The developed methodology was applied to test real sample such as spent SCR catalyst. The results of applicability and res-usability studies concluded that the resin can be used for more than five cycles without losing its adsorption and re-useable efficacy more than 90% | Present method |