4.6 Article

Powerful Reactive Sorption of Silver(I) and Mercury(II) onto Poly(o-phenylenediamine) Microparticles

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 1675-1684

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la802410p

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [50773053]
  2. Foundation of Key Laboratory of Molecular Engineering of Polymers, Fudan University, China

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The strong adsorbability of Ag(I) and Hg(II) ions onto fine poly(o-phenylenediamine) (PoPD) microparticles synthesized through a chemically oxidative polymerization of o-phenylenediamine was systematically examined and PoPD/Ag nanocomposites were facilely prepared through the reactive sorption method. The effect of the (NH4)(2)S2O8 oxidant/o-phenylenediamine monomer ratio on the polymerization yield, macromolecular structure, conductivity, and insolubility of the PoPD microparticles was studied. The Ag(I) adsorbability of the microparticles was significantly optimized by varying the oxidant/monomer ratio, doping state, Ag(I) concentration, sorption time, and solution pH. The Ag(I) adsorbance steadily increases with changing oxidant/monomer molar ratio from 3/1 to 1/1, reaching up to the highest Ag(I) adsorbance of 533 mg.g(-1) at the oxidant/monomer ratio of 1/1. The sorption process fits the pseudosecond-order kinetics. The sorption is rapid because both the adsorbance and adsorptivity within 30 min reach up to 76% of the final values. The initial sorption rate of silver ions obtained from the pseudosecond-order equation is 12.9 mg.g(-1).min(-1). The highest adsorptivity of silver ions is up to 99.1%. The optimal solution pH for Ag(I) sorption is around 5.0. The sorption mechanism may include the chelation and redox reaction between Ag(I) ions and amine/imine groups on the PoPD chains. Similarly, the microparticles also have powerful Hg(II) adsorbability with 96.7% adsorptivity at an initial Hg(II) concentration of 4 mM. Competitive sorption between Ag(I) and Hg(II) in their mixture solution onto the microparticles; was studied, exhibiting a preferential sorption toward Ag(I). The microparticles as a cost-effective sorbent demonstrate a promising application in the removal and even recovery of heavy-metal ions from wastewater. The PoPD/Ag nanocomposites possess (1) high Ag content of 34.8 wt %, (2) small diameter of Ag nanoparticles of around 10-20 nm, (3) narrow size distribution, (4) intrinsic electrical conductivity that is much higher than that of original PoPD microparticles without Ag.

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