4.7 Article

Development and evaluation of thiosalicylic-modified/ion-imprinted chitosan for selective removal of cerium (III) ion

Journal

CARBOHYDRATE POLYMERS
Volume 326, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbpol.2023.121620

Keywords

Chitosan; Thiosalicylichydrazide; Cerium (III) ions; Ion-imprinting

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Chitosan was used as a bio-based product for the development of microparticles that can specifically remove cerium ions through ion-imprinting technology. Microparticles with thiosalicylic hydrazide-modified chitosan (TSCS) were prepared and demonstrated good selectivity for Ce3+ removal. The mechanism of adsorption was found to be chelation of Ce3+ with the chelating units on TSCS.
Chitosan was used in this study as the bio-based product for the development of microparticles for the specifically targeted removal of cerium ions (Ce3+) by ion-imprinting technology. A thiosalicylic hydrazide-modified chitosan (TSCS) is produced via cyanoacetylation of chitosan, followed by hydrazidine derivatization to finally introduce the thiosalicylate chelating units. Ion-imprinted Ce-TSCS sorbent microparticles were prepared by combining the synthesized TSCS with Ce3+, crosslinking the polymeric Ce3+/TSCS complex with glutaraldehyde, and releasing the chelated Ce3+ using an eluent solution containing a mixture of EDTA and HNO3. Ce-TSCS had a capacity of 164 +/- 1 mg/g and better removal selectivity for Ce3+ because it was smart enough to figure out which target ions would fit into the holes made by Ce3+ during the imprinting process. The kinetic data were well suited to a pseudo-second-order model, and the isotherms were well described by the Langmuir model, both of which pointed to chemisorption and adsorption through Ce3+ chelation. oS and FTIR analyses demonstrate that the predominant adsorption mechanism is the coordination of Ce3+ with the -NH-, -NH2, and -SH chelating units of the thiosalicylic hydrazidine. These findings provide fresh direction for the development of sorbent materials that can effectively and selectively remove Ce3+ from aqueous effluents.

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