| Literature DB >> 35541160 |
Yu-Ying Wang1,2, Hai-Yang Ji1,3, Hao-Hao Lu1,2, Yu-Xue Liu1,2, Rui-Qin Yang4,5, Li-Li He1,2, Sheng-Mao Yang1,2,3.
Abstract
In this study, a jacobsite-biochar nanocomposite (MnFe2O4-BC) was fabricated and used to simultaneously remove Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) from water via adsorption. The MnFe2O4-BC nanocomposite was prepared via a co-precipitation method and analyzed using various techniques. The results confirm the successful decoration of the biochar surface with MnFe2O4 nanoparticles. The maximum Sb(iii) removal efficiency was found to be higher from bi-solute solutions containing Cd(ii) than from single-solute systems, suggesting that the presence of Cd(ii) enhances the removal of Sb(iii). The Langmuir isotherm model describes well Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) removal via adsorption onto the MnFe2O4-BC nanocomposite. The maximum adsorption capacities are 237.53 and 181.49 mg g-1 for Sb(iii) and Cd(ii), respectively, in a bi-solute system. Thus, the prepared MnFe2O4-BC nanocomposite is demonstrated to be a potential adsorbent for simultaneously removing Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) ions from aqueous solutions. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35541160 PMCID: PMC9077564 DOI: 10.1039/c7ra13151h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1(a) XRD patterns and (b) FT-IR spectra of BC and MnFe2O4–BC; (c) FESEM image of BC (inset: EDX spectrum of BC); (d) FESEM image of MnFe2O4–BC (inset: EDX spectrum of MnFe2O4–BC); (e) nitrogen adsorption–desorption isotherms of BC and MnFe2O4–BC; and (f) pore size distributions of BC and MnFe2O4–BC.
Fig. 2The effects of pH on the removal of Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) from a binary system using (a) BC and (b) MnFe2O4–BC at room temperature for 24 h; the removal of Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) from a binary system at pH 7.0 using (c) BC and (d) MnFe2O4–BC at room temperature, after different contact times; and the effects of initial concentration on the removal of Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) from a binary system at pH 7.0 using (e) BC and (f) MnFe2O4–BC.
Fig. 3(a and c) Pseudo-first order and (b and d) pseudo-second order kinetics sorption data for the adsorption of Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) in a binary system using BC (a and b) and MnFe2O4–BC (c and d).
Pseudo-first-order and pseudo-second-order kinetic parameters for Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) adsorbed using BC and MnFe2O4–BC in a binary system
| Sample | Ion | Experimental parameters | Pseudo-first order | Pseudo-second order | |||||
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| pH |
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| BC | Sb( | 7 | 24.60 | 0.0034 | 8.59 | 0.636 | 0.0010 | 25.11 | 0.999 |
| BC | Cd( | 7 | 21.60 | 0.0041 | 20.85 | 0.885 | 2 × 10−6 | 21.52 | 0.934 |
| MnFe2O4–BC | Sb( | 7 | 62.80 | 0.0035 | 3.55 | 0.551 | 0.0040 | 62.93 | 0.999 |
| MnFe2O4–BC | Cd( | 7 | 48.80 | 0.0044 | 3.89 | 0.743 | 0.024 | 48.99 | 0.999 |
Fig. 4(a and c) Langmuir and (b and d) Freundlich isotherms for the adsorption of Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) onto BC (a and b) and MnFe2O4–BC (c and d) in a binary system.
Langmuir and Freundlich parameters for Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) adsorbed using BC and MnFe2O4–BC in a binary system
| Sample | Ion | Langmuir constants | Freundlich constants | ||||
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| BC | Sb( | 0.00789 | 199.60 | 0.912 | 4.803 | 1.66 | 0.973 |
| BC | Cd( | 0.0109 | 145.13 | 0.990 | 4.038 | 1.66 | 0.947 |
| MnFe2O4–BC | Sb( | 0.0316 | 237.53 | 0.969 | 17.89 | 2.04 | 0.673 |
| MnFe2O4–BC | Cd( | 0.00605 | 181.49 | 0.960 | 49.34 | 4.62 | 0.900 |
Fig. 5(a) The effects of KCl concentration on the adsorption of Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) in binary system removal using MnFe2O4–BC; (b) the effect of competing ions on Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) adsorption onto MnFe2O4–BC in a binary system; and (c) the uptake percentages of Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) in a mixed solution using MnFe2O4–BC over five consecutive adsorption–desorption cycles.
A comparison of the adsorption capacities of MnFe2O4–BC for Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) with those of other reported adsorbents
| Adsorbents | Concentration range (mg L−1) | pH | Adsorption capacity (mg g−1) | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sb( | Cd( | ||||
| Pyrochar from swine manure | 0.1–100/0.3–150 | 6 | 13.09 | 81.32 |
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| Mercapto-functionalized hybrid sorbent | 100–800 | 5 | 108.8 | — |
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| Hematite modified magnetic nanoparticles | 1–20 | 4.1 | 36.7 | — |
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| Graphene | 1–10 | 11 | 8.506 | — |
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| Biochar derived from | 5–500 | 6 | — | 35.71 |
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| Titanate nanotubes | 25–300 | 57 | — | 65.97 |
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| Chitosan crosslinked with epichlorohydrin–triphosphate | 100–400 | 5.6 | — | 83.75 |
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| Manganese dioxide | 0.05–0.7 | — | — | 176 |
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| Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) | 10–250 | — | 225 |
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| MnFe2O4–BC | 25–500 | 7 | 237.53 | 181.49 | This work |
Fig. 6(a) FT-IR spectrum and (b) XPS spectrum of MnFe2O4–BC after Sb(iii) and Cd(ii) co-adsorption.