4.7 Article

Utilization of waste aluminum cans in the fabrication of hydroxysodalite nanoparticles and their chitosan biopolymer composites for the removal of Ni(II) and Pb(II) ions from aqueous solutions: Kinetic, equilibrium, and reusability studies

Journal

MICROCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 145, Issue -, Pages 18-25

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.microc.2018.10.016

Keywords

Aluminum wastes; Hydroxysodalite nanopartieles; Chitosan composites; Adsorption

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Hydroxysodalite nanoparticles (ZW5, ZW10, ZW15, and ZW20) with different crystallite sizes (46.43, 54.98, 62.69, and 64.12 run, respectively) were hydrothermally synthesized from an aluminum waste. Also, different mmoles of sodium metasilicate pentahydrate as a silicon source (23.58, 47.17, 70.75, and 94.34, respectively) were utilized. In addition, chitosan composites with hydroxysodalite nanoparticles were synthesized (CZW5, CZW10, CZW15, and CZW20). XRD, EDS, and FT-IR were utilized to recognize the synthesized products and their functional group. Besides, FE-SEM and BET techniques were utilized to recognize the morphology and surface textures of the synthesized products. Moreover, Ni(II) and Pb(II) ions were successfully separated from aqueous solutions using the synthesized products. The atomic absorption spectrophotometer was used for the quantitative determination of Ni(II) and Pb(II) ions before and after the adsorption processes. In the case of Ni (II), the maximum adsorption capacities of ZW5 and CZW5 were 7.74 and 10.21 mg/g, respectively. But, their values in the case of Pb(II) were 12.41 and 17.85 mg/g, respectively. The kinetic study proved that the pseudo second-order and intra-particle diffusion models are more convenient to describe the adsorption of Ni(II) or Pb (II) ions using ZW5 or CZW5. Besides, equilibrium study proved that Langmuir isotherm greatly exceeded Freundlich in the description of the adsorption processes. Moreover, reusability study proved that these adsorbents are stable, promising, and can be used many times without losing its adsorption capacity toward Ni(II) or Pb(II) ions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available