| Literature DB >> 36136454 |
Chunlin He1,2, Yun Liu1,2, Chunhui Zheng1,2, Yanming Jiang1,2, Yan Liao1,2, Jiaxin Huang1,2, Toyohisa Fujita1,2, Yuezhou Wei3,4, Shaojian Ma1,2.
Abstract
Utilising waste amine-oxime (WAO) resin through microwave semi-carbonization, a carbon adsorbent (CA) was obtained to remove Pb(II). After microwave treatment, the pore size of the skeleton structure, three-dimensional porous network, and lamellar pore structure of WAO was improved. The distribution coefficient (Kd) of Pb(II) onto CA is 620 mL/g, and the maximum adsorption capacity of Pb(II) is 82.67 mg/g after 20 min of WAO microwave treatment. The adsorption kinetics and adsorption isotherms conform to the quasi-second-order kinetic equation and Langmuir adsorption isotherm model, respectively. The surface of MT-WAO is negatively charged and the adsorption mechanism is mainly electrostatic interaction. Pb(II) elution in hydrochloric acid solution is more than 98%, and its recovery is high at 318 K and for 1 h.Entities:
Keywords: Pb(II); adsorbent; adsorption; microwave; waste amine-oxime
Year: 2022 PMID: 36136454 PMCID: PMC9504436 DOI: 10.3390/toxics10090489
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxics ISSN: 2305-6304
Figure 1The structural features and elements of fresh and waste amine oxime resin: (a) fresh amine-oxime resin (FAO), (b) waste amine-oxime resin (WAO), (c,d) SEM of WAO, (e) XPS of WAO and FAO, (f) FT-IR of WAO and FAO.
C, N, O and H contents in the FAO and WAO.
| Element (%) | FAO | WAO |
|---|---|---|
| C | 46.07 | 46.04 |
| O | 57.86 | 88.29 |
| N | 23.96 | 8.240 |
| H | 3.047 | 5.373 |
Figure 2(a) Differential pore volume distribution of pores with different diameters in the WAO resin (b) TG and DTA curves of WAO resin.
Figure 3SEM images of (a,b)WAO resin (c,d) MT-WAO-resin (e,f) EDS of MT-WAO resin after adsorbing Pb(II).
Figure 4Differential pore volume distribution of pores with different diameters of MT-WAO resin.
Figure 5Effect of microwave treatment time on the adsorption of Pb(II).
Figure 6(a) Effect of pH on the adsorption of Pb(II) onto MT-WAO resin, (b) zeta potential of MT-WAO.
Figure 7The adsorption kinetics. (a) effect of time on adsorption; (b) the fitting of pseudo first order; (c) the fitting of pseudo second order.
Figure 8The adsorption isotherms of Pb(II) on the MT-WAO resin: (a) the influence of the initial concentration of Pb(II) on the adsorption, (b) the fitting of Langmuir model, (c) the fitting of Freundlich model.
The fitting parameters of the adsorption isotherms for the Langmuir and Freundlich models.
| Metal Ion | Langmuir Isotherm Model | Freundlich Isotherm Model | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||
| 298 | 79.85 | 0.0129 | 0.9995 | 15.26 | 4.772 | 0.8947 | |
| Pb(II) | 308 | 82.24 | 0.0147 | 0.9991 | 17.5 | 5.135 | 0.9018 |
| 318 | 82.67 | 0.0194 | 0.9992 | 19.94 | 5.390 | 0.9246 | |
Thermodynamic parameters for the adsorption of Pb2+ on MT-WAO resin.
| Concentration of Pb2+ (mg/g) | Δ | Δ | Δ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 298 K | 309 K | 318 K | |||
| 50 | 21.15 | 94.16 | −6.21 | −6.42 | −6.63 |
| 100 | 54.01 | 177.48 | −52.83 | −54.61 | −56.38 |
| 200 | 26.07 | 83.73 | −24.93 | −25.76 | −26.60 |
| 300 | 10.46 | 25.66 | −7.64 | −7.89 | −8.15 |
| 400 | 10.01 | 22.55 | −6.71 | −6.94 | −7.16 |
Comparison of Pb2+ and Cu2+ adsorption performance of the MT-WAO with other adsorbents.
| Adsorbents | Adsorption Capacities (mg/g) | References |
|---|---|---|
| Pb2+ | ||
| MT-WAO | 82.67 | This work |
| Sago waste | 109.7 | [ |
| Aminated polyacrylonitrile fibers | 76.1 | [ |
| Lignocellulosic biomaterial | 62.1 | [ |
| Activated carbon | 30.4 | [ |
| Guanyl-modified cellulose | 52.0 | [ |
| Weak acidic cation resin | 58.1 | [ |
| Pigeon peas hulls | 20.8 | [ |
| Chars from Prosopis Africana | 45.3 | [ |
Figure 9FT-IR spectra of (a) WAO and MT-WAO resins (b) before and (c) after the adsorption of Pb(II).
Figure 10XPS (a) survey spectra and (b) regions of O 1 s of MT-WAO resin before and after the adsorption of Pb(II).
Figure 11The schematic diagram of the possible adsorption mechanism of the MT-WAO.
Figure 12Variation of elution percentage of Pb(II) with (a) time and (b) temperature.