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Enhanced adsorption and co-adsorption of heavy metals using highly hydrophilicity amine-functionalized magnetic hydrochar supported MIL-53(Fe)-NH2: performance, kinetics and mechanism studies

Research Square (Research Square) 2023 Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xin Luo, Haiying Du, Haiying Du, Xiaochao Zhang, Bo Tang, Meichen Zhang, Hen Kang, Yanqi Ma

Summary

Researchers developed a composite material made from invasive plant-derived carbon combined with a metal-organic framework to simultaneously remove multiple heavy metals from water. The approach addresses co-contamination of aquatic environments where heavy metals and microplastics often occur together.

Abstract It is a "kill two birds with one stone" method to convert invasive plants into hydrochar via hydrothermal carbonization as well as coinciding with 3R rules (reduction, recycling and reuse). In this work, a series of hydrochars (pristine, modified and composite) derived from invasive plants Alternanthera Philoxeroides (AP) were prepared and applied to the adsorption and co-adsorption of heavy metals (HMs) such as Pb(II), Cr(VI), Cu(II), Cd(II), Zn(II) and Ni(II). The results show MIL-53(Fe)-NH 2 - magnetic hydrochar composite (M-HBAP) displayed a strong affinity for HMs, which the maximum adsorption capacity for HMs were 261.74 (Pb(II)), 252.50 (Cr(VI)), 180.92 (Cd(II)), 163.76 (Cu(II)) and 77.84 (Zn(II)) mg/g calculated by Langmuir model. This may be because the doping of MIL-53(Fe)-NH 2 enhanced the surface hydrophilicity of hydrochar, which allows hydrochar to disperse in the water within 0.12 s and possessed excellent dispersibility compared with pristine hydrochar (BAP) and amine-functionalized magnetic modified hydrochar (HBAP). Furthermore, the BET surface area of BAP was improved from 5.63 to 64.10 m 2 /g after doing MIL-53(Fe)-NH 2 . M-HBAP shows a strong adsorption effect on the single HMs system (52-153 mg/g), while it decreased significantly (17-62 mg/g) in the mixed HMs system due to the competitive adsorption. Cr(VI) can produce strong electrostatic interaction with M-HBAP, Pb(II) can react with CaC 2 O 4 on the surface of M-HBAP for chemical precipitation, and other HMs can react with functional groups on the surface of M-HBAP for complexation and ion exchange. In addition, five adsorption-desorption cycle experiments and vibrating sample magnetometry (VSM) curves also proved the feasibility of the M-HBAP application.

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