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Activated Carbon/Transition Metal (Ni, In, Cu) Hexacyanoferrate Nanocomposites for Cesium Adsorption

Transition metal hexacyanoferrate/microporous activated carbon composites were obtained using a simple successive impregnation approach. The effect of metal type (nickel, indium, or copper), and the carbon oxidation on the composite characteristics (porosity, metal structure, and particle size), as...

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Autores principales: Kiener, Julien, Limousy, Lionel, Jeguirim, Mejdi, Le Meins, Jean-Marc, Hajjar-Garreau, Samar, Bigoin, Gaetan, Ghimbeu, Camélia Matei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6514891/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30995768
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma12081253
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author Kiener, Julien
Limousy, Lionel
Jeguirim, Mejdi
Le Meins, Jean-Marc
Hajjar-Garreau, Samar
Bigoin, Gaetan
Ghimbeu, Camélia Matei
author_facet Kiener, Julien
Limousy, Lionel
Jeguirim, Mejdi
Le Meins, Jean-Marc
Hajjar-Garreau, Samar
Bigoin, Gaetan
Ghimbeu, Camélia Matei
author_sort Kiener, Julien
collection PubMed
description Transition metal hexacyanoferrate/microporous activated carbon composites were obtained using a simple successive impregnation approach. The effect of metal type (nickel, indium, or copper), and the carbon oxidation on the composite characteristics (porosity, metal structure, and particle size), as well as on the removal efficiency of cesium from aqueous solution was investigated. Successful formation of the desired metal hexacyanoferrate phase was achieved and the size of the metallic nanoparticles and their dispersion in the carbon network was found to depend on the metal type, with the indium and nickel-based materials exhibiting the smallest particle size distribution (< 10 nm). Adsorption tests performed under batch conditions demonstrate that the copper hexacyanoferrate/activated carbon composite present the highest cesium removal capacity from aqueous solution (74.7 mg·g(−1)) among the three studied metal-based nanocomposites. The carbon oxidation treatment leads to the increase in the number of functional groups to the detriment of the porosity but allows for an improvement in the Cs adsorption capacity. This indicates that the Cs adsorption process is governed by the carbon surface chemistry and not its porosity. Moreover, combining oxidized carbon support with copper hexacyanoferrate induces the highest cesium adsorption capacity (101.5 mg·g(−1)). This could be related to synergistic effects through two absorption mechanisms, i.e., a cation exchange mechanism of Cs with the metallic hexacyanoferrate phase and Cs adsorption via carbon oxygen surface groups, as demonstrated using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analyses.
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spelling pubmed-65148912019-05-31 Activated Carbon/Transition Metal (Ni, In, Cu) Hexacyanoferrate Nanocomposites for Cesium Adsorption Kiener, Julien Limousy, Lionel Jeguirim, Mejdi Le Meins, Jean-Marc Hajjar-Garreau, Samar Bigoin, Gaetan Ghimbeu, Camélia Matei Materials (Basel) Article Transition metal hexacyanoferrate/microporous activated carbon composites were obtained using a simple successive impregnation approach. The effect of metal type (nickel, indium, or copper), and the carbon oxidation on the composite characteristics (porosity, metal structure, and particle size), as well as on the removal efficiency of cesium from aqueous solution was investigated. Successful formation of the desired metal hexacyanoferrate phase was achieved and the size of the metallic nanoparticles and their dispersion in the carbon network was found to depend on the metal type, with the indium and nickel-based materials exhibiting the smallest particle size distribution (< 10 nm). Adsorption tests performed under batch conditions demonstrate that the copper hexacyanoferrate/activated carbon composite present the highest cesium removal capacity from aqueous solution (74.7 mg·g(−1)) among the three studied metal-based nanocomposites. The carbon oxidation treatment leads to the increase in the number of functional groups to the detriment of the porosity but allows for an improvement in the Cs adsorption capacity. This indicates that the Cs adsorption process is governed by the carbon surface chemistry and not its porosity. Moreover, combining oxidized carbon support with copper hexacyanoferrate induces the highest cesium adsorption capacity (101.5 mg·g(−1)). This could be related to synergistic effects through two absorption mechanisms, i.e., a cation exchange mechanism of Cs with the metallic hexacyanoferrate phase and Cs adsorption via carbon oxygen surface groups, as demonstrated using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analyses. MDPI 2019-04-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6514891/ /pubmed/30995768 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma12081253 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kiener, Julien
Limousy, Lionel
Jeguirim, Mejdi
Le Meins, Jean-Marc
Hajjar-Garreau, Samar
Bigoin, Gaetan
Ghimbeu, Camélia Matei
Activated Carbon/Transition Metal (Ni, In, Cu) Hexacyanoferrate Nanocomposites for Cesium Adsorption
title Activated Carbon/Transition Metal (Ni, In, Cu) Hexacyanoferrate Nanocomposites for Cesium Adsorption
title_full Activated Carbon/Transition Metal (Ni, In, Cu) Hexacyanoferrate Nanocomposites for Cesium Adsorption
title_fullStr Activated Carbon/Transition Metal (Ni, In, Cu) Hexacyanoferrate Nanocomposites for Cesium Adsorption
title_full_unstemmed Activated Carbon/Transition Metal (Ni, In, Cu) Hexacyanoferrate Nanocomposites for Cesium Adsorption
title_short Activated Carbon/Transition Metal (Ni, In, Cu) Hexacyanoferrate Nanocomposites for Cesium Adsorption
title_sort activated carbon/transition metal (ni, in, cu) hexacyanoferrate nanocomposites for cesium adsorption
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6514891/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30995768
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma12081253
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