| Literature DB >> 35520446 |
Li-Li Wang1, Chen Ling2, Bang-Sen Li1, Da-Shuai Zhang1, Chen Li1, Xiao-Peng Zhang1, Zai-Feng Shi1.
Abstract
In this study, dendritic polyamine chitosan beads with and without 2-aminomethyl pyridine were facilely prepared and characterized. Compared to CN (without the pyridine function), more adsorption active sites, larger pores, higher nitrogen content, higher specific surface area, and higher strength could be obtained for CNP (with the pyridine function). CNP microspheres afforded a larger adsorption capacity than those obtained by CN for different pH values; further, the uptake amounts of Cu(ii) were 0.84 and 1.12 mmol g-1 for CN and CNP beads, respectively, at pH 5. The CNP microspheres could scavenge Cu(ii) from highly acidic and salty solutions: the maximum simulated uptake amount of 1.93 mmol g-1 at pH 5 could be achieved. Due to the strong bonding ability and weakly basic property of pyridine groups, the adsorption capacity of Cu(ii) at pH 1 was 0.75 mmol g-1 in highly salty solutions, which was comparative to those obtained from the commercial pyridine chelating resin M4195 (Q Cu(II) = 0.78 mmol g-1 at pH 1). In addition, a distinct salt-promotion effect could be observed for CNP beads at both pH 5 and 1. Therefore, the prepared adsorbent CNP beads can have promising potential applications in the selective capturing of heavy metals in complex solutions with higher concentrations of H+ and inorganic salts, such as wastewaters from electroplating liquid and battery industries. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35520446 PMCID: PMC9054208 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra02034f
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Scheme 1Preparation of CNP and CN beads.
Fig. 1Effect of pH on the adsorption of CN and CNP beads.
Fig. 2Adsorption isotherms of CNP at pH 5 and 1.
Fig. 3Kinetic adsorption behaviors of Cu(ii) at pH 5 and 1.
Fig. 4Adsorption amounts and Kp values of Cu(ii) for different concentrations of NaNO3.
Fig. 5XPS spectra (N1s) of CNP beads before and after adsorbing Cu(ii) at pH 5 and 1.
Fig. 6Possible mechanism of the adsorption process.
| Adsorbents | BET specific area (m2 g−1) | Pore volume (cm3 g−1) | BJH average adsorption aperture (nm) |
|---|---|---|---|
| CN | 1.2116 | 0.001121 | — |
| CNP | 2.043 | 0.011143 | 20.1124 |
| Adsorbents | C (%) | H (%) | N (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| CN | 42.265 | 7.759 | 8.905 |
| CNP | 56.568 | 6.108 | 12.774 |