4.7 Article

Preparation of a porous hydroxyapatite-carbon composite with the bio-template of sugarcane top stems and its use for the Pb(II) removal

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 187, Issue -, Pages 650-661

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.03.275

Keywords

Sugarcane top; Stem bio-template; Hierarchical porous microstructure; Hydroxyapatite; Removal performance; Lead

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A mature crop of sugarcane produces large amount of residue at harvest in the form of tops. The aim of the present work was to use the discarded tops of harvested sugarcane as a potential raw material for the removal of heavy metals from aqueous solution. A hydroxyapatite-carbon adsorbent with the hierarchical porous microstructure of sugarcane stems (SS-HAP/C) was prepared by carbonizing stem internodes of sugarcane tops and subsequent doping with the saturated limewater solution and 0.02 mol/L (NH4)(2)HPO4 solution in turn for five times. The morphological character of 55-HAP/C was inherited from the bio-precursors of sugarcane top stems, which mainly included the macropores from the storage parenchyma thin-walled cells of 30-115 mu m in width, the parallel and densely packed vessels of 20-85 mu m in width, the sclerenchyma thick-walled cells of similar to 30 mu m in width, and the pits in the vessel and cell walls of about similar to 4.0 mu m in width. The specific surface area through the mercury porosimetry method and the Brunauer Emmett Teller (BET) surface area were estimated to be 5.63 m(2)/g and 8.52-28.44 m(2)/g, respectively. For the test at the initial Pb(II) concentrations of 50, 100, 150 and 200 mg/L, the removal capacities of the un-pulverized SS-HAP/C (>3 mm) were determined to be 52.62, 101.85, 152.08 and 210.69 mg/g, respectively, which were comparable to the adsorption capacities of the synthetic nano-hydroxyapatites. The SS-HAP/C showed an excellent removal performance as an adsorbent for Pb(II) ions. The formation of the (PbxCa1-x)(5)(PO4)(3)(OH) solid solution through the coexisting ion exchange (x = 0.01-0.05) and dissolution-precipitation (x = 0.20-0.21) processes was the main mechanism for the Pb(II) uptake. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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