4.7 Article

Lead removal from water using carboxycellulose nanofibers prepared by nitro-oxidation method

Journal

CELLULOSE
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 1961-1973

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10570-018-1659-9

Keywords

Carboxycellulose; Nanofiber; Jute; Nitro-oxidation; Lead removal

Funding

  1. SusChEM Program of the National Science Foundation [DMR-1409507]
  2. Electric Power Research Institute [EPRI-77846]
  3. Division Of Materials Research
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1409507] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Carboxycellulose nanofibers were extracted from untreated jute using a simple nitro-oxidation method based on nitric acid/sodium nitrite. The characteristics of nitro-oxidized carboxycellulose nanofibers (NOCNF) with low crystallinity (35%), high carboxylate content (1.15 mmol/g) and high surface charge (- 70 mV) made them an excellent substrate for Pb(II) ion removal from water. For example, a low concentration of NOCNF suspension (0.23 wt%) could remove a wide range of Pb(II) ions ranging from 50 to 5000 ppm in a short time-interval (< 5 min) at room temperature and pH similar to 7, where the adsorption efficiency of NOCNF was found to be 2270 mg/g based on the Langmuir isotherm analysis. The high removal efficiency of NOCNF was due to the combined effects of adsorption (dominated at Pb(II) concentration <= 1000 ppm) and mineralization of lead hydroxide (Pb(OH)(2)) crystals at high Pb(II) concentration (> 1000 ppm). Evidence of nanoscale lead hydroxide crystallization, induced by the lead(II)-NOCNF aggregated scaffold, was confirmed by FTIR, UV-visible spectroscopy, SEM/EDS, WAXD and TEM measurements.

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