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Efficient removal of diclofenac from surface water by the functionalized multilayer magnetic adsorbent: Kinetics and mechanism

The Science of The Total Environment 2020 93 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Rui Zhao, Huaili Zheng, Zheng Zhong, Zheng Zhong, Chun Zhao, Yongjun Sun, Yaoyao Huang, Xinyu Zheng

Summary

Researchers developed a chitosan-based multilayer magnetic adsorbent (FCS-PD) for removing diclofenac from surface water, demonstrating efficient pharmaceutical removal through adsorption kinetics studies in both synthetic water and real surface water samples, with magnetic separation enabling practical adsorbent recovery.

Developing robust and effective adsorbent for removing ubiquitous pharmaceutical diclofenac (DCF) from the aquatic environment is vitally important for environmental safety. Hence, a novel chitosan-based multilayer adsorbent (FCS-PD) with magnetic separation ability and surface functionality was successfully assembled, which had countless potential for removing contaminants from water. A series of instrumental technologies were performed to demonstrate the physicochemical properties of FCS-PD. Its adsorption performance toward DCF removal was comprehensively evaluated in synthetic water and surface water. The effects of microplastics, inorganic ions and humic acid on the adsorption were investigated. The maximum adsorption capacity of FCS-PD was calculated as 434.78 mg/g under neutral conditions, exhibiting superior adsorption performance than most reported adsorbents. The DCF in surface water was practically removed at low concentration (50 μg/L). FCS-PD presented a multistage kinetics controlled by chemisorption and intraparticle diffusion, which was emphasized by the pseudo-second-order kinetic and intra-particle diffusion analysis. After five cycles of adsorption and regeneration, the adsorption capacity only decreased by 9.9%, indicating the satisfactory regeneration of FCS-PD. The analysis of high-resolution X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic (XPS) and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) revealed that the quaternary ammonium groups on the outer layer and the amino and hydroxyl groups on the chitosan layer are involved in the capture of DCF under electrostatic force and hydrogen bonding.

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