4.8 Article

Amphiphilic Thiol Polymer Nanogel Removes Environmentally Relevant Mercury Species from Both Produced Water and Hydrocarbons

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 2, Pages 1231-1241

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c05470

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF)
  2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) under the NSF, Center for the Environmental Implications of Nanotechnology (CEINT) [EF-1266252]
  3. Carnegie Mellon University [MCF-677785]
  4. Chevron Energy Technology Company

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The newly developed polymer nanogel can efficiently remove environmentally relevant mercury species from both produced water and liquid hydrocarbon, showing significant potential for applications.
Technologies for removal of mercury from produced water and hydrocarbon phases are desired by oil and gas production facilities, oil refineries, and petrochemical plants. Herein, we synthesize and demonstrate the efficacy of an amphiphilic, thiol-abundant (11.8 wt % S, as thiol) polymer nanogel that can remove environmentally relevant mercury species from both produced water and the liquid hydrocarbon. The nanogel disperses in both aqueous and hydrocarbon phases. It has a high sorption affinity for dissolved Hg(II) complexes and Hg-dissolved organic matter complexes found in produced water and elemental (Hg-0) and soluble Hg-alkyl thiol species found in hydrocarbons. X-ray absorption spectroscopy analysis indicates that the sorbed mercury is transformed to a surface-bound Hg(SR) 2 species in both water and hydrocarbon regardless of its initial speciation. The nanogel had high affinity to native mercury species present in real produced water (>99.5% removal) and in natural gas condensate (>85% removal) samples, removing majority of the mercury species using only a SO mg L-1 applied dose. This thiolated amphiphilic polymeric nanogel has significant potential to remove environmentally relevant mercury species from both water and hydrocarbon at low applied doses, outperforming reported sorbents like sulfur-impregnated activated carbons because of the mass of accessible thiol groups in the nanogel.

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