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Carboxymethylated Cellulose Fibers as Lowcost and Renewable Adsorbent Materials Jian Wang, Miao Dang, Chao Duan, Wei Zhao, and Kai Wang Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.7b03697 • Publication Date (Web): 05 Dec 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 9, 2017
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Carboxymethylated Cellulose Fibers as Low-cost and
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Renewable Adsorbent Materials
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Jian Wang a, b, Miao Danga*, Chao Duana, Wei Zhaoa, Kai Wanga
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a. College of Bioresources Chemical and Materials Engineering, Shaanxi University of Science &
5
Technology, Xi’an 710021, China
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b. National Demonstration Center for Experimental Light Chemistry Engineering Education, Shaanxi
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University of Science & Technology, Xi’an 710021, China
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ABSTRACT: In recent years, decontamination of heavy metals from the water body is an important
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topic in China due to the rapid industrialization and it is of both fundamental and practical interest to
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develop eco-friendly, renewable, and degradable materials for this purpose. In this study,
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cellulose-based adsorbent materials were prepared, based on the carboxymethylated modification
13
method. The carboxymethylated cellulose fiber (CMF) material, with high carboxyl content and
14
desirable fiber morphology, was demonstrated, and its application to remove heavy metal ions, such as
15
copper ions, via filtration-adsorption process, was investigated. Results showed that the CMF-based
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adsorbent material displayed excellent adsorption capacity and regenerated property, due to its high
17
carboxyl content and accessibility to copper ions. Besides, the CMF retained good fiber morphology
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due to a mild carboxymethylation on fibers surface (exterior and interior), which has great potential to
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form commercial renewable filtering material for copper ions removal.
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KEYWORDS: Carboxymethylated cellulose fiber, Adsorbent material, Wastewater treatment, Copper
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ions removal
22 23
1. INTRODUCTION
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With the rapid development of copper ions mining operations and copper ions plating facilities, the
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discharge of wastewater containing copper ions into the environment significantly increases 1. Copper
26
ions have specific function in animal metabolism, however, the excessive ingestion of copper ions can
27
lead to serious toxicological concerns, such as cramps, vomiting, convulsion or even death 2. Therefore,
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it is necessary to treat copper ions-containing wastewater prior to discharging it.
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A wide range of treatment technologies have been developed to remove heavy metal ions from the
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wastewater, including chemical precipitation, ion exchange, adsorption, membrane separation etc. 1, 3-5.
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So far, chemical precipitation has been considered to be the most practical method since it is low-cost
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and easy-to-handle. However, the chemical precipitation would generate large volumes of low density
33
sludge and result in dewatering and disposal problems 6. Recently, the adsorption method has been
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recognized as an effective and economic technique for removal of heavy metal ions from wastewater
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since the adsorption process offers flexibility in design and operation, and can produce high-quality
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treated effluent in many cases. Activated carbon (AC) adsorbents, the most typical adsorbents, are
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under extensive studies 7-9. Membrane filtration technology shows great potential for heavy metal ions
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removal owing to its high efficiency, easy operation and space saving features, and there is a large body
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of literature on the topic of membrane filtration
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materials as low cost, eco-friendly, and renewable adsorbents for wastewater treatment are of practical
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interest.
10-13
. Furthermore, economic, green and sustainable
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Cellulose is one of the natural, bio-based materials with eco-friendly and low cost features. In recent
43
years, one of the emerging areas in the cellulose industry is the development of adsorbent materials
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which make good use of cellulose, cellulose derivatives and cellulose composites14-16. Much effort in
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cellulose-based adsorbent materials has been focused on studies of increasing the charge of cellulose.
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Many widely reported chemical pretreatments17-20 (i.e. TEMPO-mediated oxidation, periodate-chlorite
47
oxidation or carboxymethylation) can introduce carboxylate groups onto the cellulose fibers for the
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charge improvement of cellulose, among which, carboxymethylation is the most economic and facile
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method. Moreover, the most important thing is that carboxymethylation is the only technology of
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industrialization to date. Hence, this work focuses on the method of carboxymethylation.
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Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) has been widely investigated as a kind of adsorption material
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Although CMC has high adsorption capacity, its recycling from wastewater is challenging due to its
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water solubility. In this project we focused on the preparation of carboxymethylated cellulose fibers
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(CMF) that were obtained through a mild carboxymethylation on the cellulose fibers surface (exterior
55
and interior). In this way, the morphology of fibers could be maintained so that the CMF would be
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easily recycled in the subsequent wastewater treatment process. The characteristics of CMF were
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investigated. Subsequently, the CMF adsorbent filter material was prepared and its adsorption
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performance to remove copper ions from synthetic waste water was studied.
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2. EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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2.1 Materials. Non-refined, bleached softwood kraft pulp fibers (SKF; MCC paper Yinhe Co., Ltd.,
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China) were used as native cellulose material, and the chemical composition of SKF was generously
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provided by MCC paper Yinhe Co., Ltd.. Reagent grade sodium chloroacetate (MCA), sodium
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hydroxide (NaOH), hydrochloric acid (HCl), sodium chloride (NaCl), sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3),
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ethanol and methyl red indicator were purchased from Jinquan chemical additive Co., Ltd. in China.
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All chemicals were used as received. Milli-Q water and deionized water were used throughout this
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work.
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Table 1. Chemical Composition of SKF Hemicellulose
Sample
Cellulose/ %
SKF
Ash content/%
Lignin / %
87.6
1.3
Xylose/%
Mannose%
5.12
7.18
0.6%
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2.2 Preparation of CMF and CMF-based Filter Material. SKF boards were torn into small pieces
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and soaked in deionized water overnight. The wet pulp was disintegrated using a deflaker, then filtered
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and dried at 50 °C. The dried pulp was mixed with a sodium monochloroacetate (MCA) solution (g of
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MCA : g of pulp fiber : g of H2O = 1.5 : 1 : 2.6) in a household mixer for 10 min and then placed in a
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60 °C water bath for 4 h for impregnation. After that, a sodium hydroxide (NaOH) solution (g of
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NaOH : g of pulp fiber : g of H2O = 1.25 : 1 : 2) was added to the reaction vessel and mixed for 10 min.
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The obtained pulp mixture was kept for 24 h at room temperature, and then soaked and washed with 70,
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80, 90 and 100 wt% ethanol in sequence until it was alkali-free. Then the yield of the mixture of
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water-soluble carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC, completely carboxymethylated without fiber
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morphology)
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carboxymethylated with good fiber morphology), so called CMC/CMF mixture, expressed as a
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percentage, was calculated relative to the raw fiber material using Equation (1):
and
water-insoluble
carboxymethylated
cellulose
fibers
(CMF,
partially
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Yield of product (%) =
(1)
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where ma is the oven dry weight of raw material (g), and mb is the oven dry weight of product (g).
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Finally, the obtained CMC/CMF mixture was further soaked and washed with distilled water to
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remove water-soluble CMC, and the yield of the residual CMF was also calculated according to
84
Equation (1).
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The obtained CMF was filtered on a glass funnel by suction filtration to prepare the CMF-based
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filter material, and the final product was air-dried before the adsorption studies.
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2.3 Characterizations
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Carboxyl Content of Pulp. The carboxyl groups (-COOH) are acidic groups introduced onto
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cellulose chains, which indicate the ion-exchange capacity of the corresponding pulp, i.e., the ability to
90
absorb metallic cations during the treatment. The carboxyl contents of SKF and CMF were determined
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according to the TAPPI T 237 with some modifications, because the carboxyl content of CMF was
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much higher than that of the normal pulp. Specifically, the volume of sodium bicarbonate-sodium
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chloride solution added to the test specimen was increased from 50.00 mL to 100.00 mL. The carboxyl
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content in milliequivalents (meq) per 100 g of oven-dried pulp was calculated according to the
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modified Equation (2):
96
,
= − + ×
× ×
!
(2)
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where A is volume in mL of 0.010 N HCl consumed in titration of 25 mL of the pulp filtrate (mL), B is
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volume in mL of 0.010 N HCl consumed in titration of 25 mL of the sodium bicarbonate-sodium
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chloride solution (mL), C is weight of water in the pulp pad, i.e., weight of wet pad with the deduction
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of the oven-dried weight of the sample (g), N is normality of HCl used in titration, W is weight of
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oven-dried test specimen (g), 100 is volume of sodium bicarbonate-sodium chloride solution added to
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the test specimen (mL), 400 is derived as 4 × 100, where 4 is a factor to account for 25 mL aliquot
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taken for titration, and 100 is to express the result on 100 g of pulp.
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FQA Analysis. The morphological properties of fibers, such as the length, width, fines content, were
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measured using the Fiber Quality Analyzer (FQA, Morfi Compact, Techpap Co. Ltd., France).
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Well-mixed dilute suspension (40 mg/L) of fiber sample was used for the measurement, which included
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approximately 5000 analyzed fibers in each suspension.
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Water Retention Value (WRV). The WRV of samples was measured according to SCAN-C 62:00.
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Samples were soaked in distilled water for 10 min at room temperature, then put them into the
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centrifuge tubes with sieves and centrifuged for 15 min at the speed of 3000 r/min to remove excess
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water. After centrifugation, samples were weighted as m0. Subsequently, the samples were dried in an
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air oven to the constant weight recorded as m1. The WRV can be calculated according to the following
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Equation (3)
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W=
" # #
× 100%
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(3)
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where m0 is the weight of sample after centrifugation (g) and m1 is the weight of sample after drying
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(g).
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Pore Volume. The pore volume of samples before and after carboxymethylation were measured
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based on the Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) analysis of nitrogen absorption isotherms by using a
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Belsorp-Max volumetric gas adsorption instrument (Bel Japan, Inc., Osaka, Japan).
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Microscopic Imaging
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Optical Microscopy. Cellulose fiber dispersions were observed with an optical microscope (DMB5,
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Motic Co. Ltd., China). Samples were dyed with a few drops of Herzbery solution prior to imaging.
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Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). Surface morphology images of fibers were recorded on a
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SEM (S-4800, HITACHI, Tokyo, Japan) operating at an accelerating voltage of 3.0 kV. Freeze-dried
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fiber samples were used, and sputter-coated with gold to a thickness of 8 nm before analysis.
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X-ray Diffraction Analysis (XRD). Crystalline analysis of oven-dried fiber samples was performed
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on a XRD analyzer (D/MAX-2200PC, Rigaku Denki Co. Ltd., Japan) operating at the Cu Kα radiation
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(λ=0.154 nm) with 40 kV and 40 mA with a 2θ ranging from 5 ° to 60 ° at a step size of 0.02 °.
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Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FT-IR). The chemical bonds and molecular structure
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of fiber samples were analyzed using a FTIR (VERTEX 70, Bruker Optics Corporation; Germany). The
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samples were dried in an oven at 60 ºC to remove the moisture. 5 mg of fiber sample was mixed with
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potassium bromide (KBr) and finely ground before the mixture was pressed to be a transparent pellet.
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The samples were measured in the transmission of a wavelength number range from 4000 to 400 cm-1.
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2.4 Adsorption Kinetics. Adsorption kinetics was studied by filtering quantitative volume of copper
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ions-containing aqueous solution (100 ppm) through the CMF-based filter material for a predetermined
136
time. The adsorption experiment proceeded in the modified filtrate flow rate-adjustable equipment is
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shown in Fig 1.
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Fig. 1 Flow Rate-adjustable Filter Equipment for Adsorption Experiment.
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All the solutions were analyzed using an inductively coupled plasma spectrometer (IRIS Intrepid,
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ICP-AES, America). The adsorption capacity at time t was calculated from the mass balance expression
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in Equation (4) according to the literature 23, 24:
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*" + ,-
() =
(4)
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where Co and Ct are initial concentration and the concentration at time t, respectively, V is the solution
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volume, and m is the dry mass of filter material.
146 147 148
The time-dependence of the adsorption is fitted with the pseudo-second-order kinetic model as described in literature 25, 26, which is shown as follows: )
+
=.
/ / 0
+ 1 0
(5)
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where qt and qe are the adsorption capacities at time t and equilibrium, respectively, and k2 is the rate
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constant of the pseudo-second-order model. The equilibrium isotherms for the adsorption are fitted by
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Langmuir and Freundlich isotherm equations27. The Langmuir equation can be expressed as:
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20
0
=
20
3
+
3 4 5
(6)
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where qe is the amount of adsorbed material at equilibrium (mg/g), Ce is the equilibrium
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concentration in solution (mg/L), qm is the maximum capacity of adsorbent (mg/g), and KL is the
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“affinity parameter” or Langmuir constant (L/mg). The linear form of Freundlich equation, which is an
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empirical equation derived to model the multilayer adsorption, can be represented as follows:
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ln ( =
8
ln 9 + ln :;
(7)
where qe and Ce are defined as above, KF is Freundlich constant (L/mg), and n is the heterogeneity
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factor. 2.5 Recycling Performance. The copper ions saturated CMF filter material was soaked in a 0.01 N
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HCl solution for 10 minutes, and was then washed with deionized water until the filtrate turned to be
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neutral (no precipitation occurred with the addition of silver nitrate solution). Subsequently, the CMF
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filter material was air-dried to constant weight before the subsequent adsorption study.
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3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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3.1 Characterization of the As-prepared CMF
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3.1.1 Yield of CMF and CMC/CMF Mixture Relative to the Raw Fiber Material. Shown in Fig.
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2 are the yields of CMF and CMC/CMF mixture obtained from the carboxymethylation of SKF relative
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to the raw fiber material, respectively. It shows that the yield (relative to the raw fiber material) of
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CMC/CMF mixture, a heterogeneous fiber complex consisting of water- soluble CMC and water-
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insoluble fibrous CMF, gradually rose and exceeded 100 wt% (due to the retention of a fraction of
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CMC in ethanol rinsing) with the increase of the carboxymethylation extent under the conditions
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studied. However, it can be inferred from Fig. 2 that the CMF/CMC fraction reduced from 1.75 to 0.60
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with the increase of the carboxymethylation extent. As Tejado et al. reported28, fibers would break apart
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and large amounts of CMC become soluble in water above 3 mmol/g of carboxylate content.
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Consequently, the increased yield of water-soluble CMC resulted in the decreasing of the CMF/CMC
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fraction as the carboxymethylation degree increased, and especially as the dosage of MCA exceeded 10
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g (the corresponding yield of CMF was 87.6 wt% relative to the raw fiber material and the CMF/CMC
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fraction was 1.17). Based on the abovementioned results, the MCA amount was optimized to be 10 g
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during the carboxymethylation and the resultant CMF under the optimum condition was used for the
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following characterization and adsorption study. In literature, the heterogeneity of carboxymethylation
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in various solvent systems, such as water and ethanol, has already been discussed and the results
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supported that CMC can be readily dissolved in distilled water and then extracted with 95 % (v/v)
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ethanol as precipitated solid29-31.
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Yield (relative to the raw fiber material)/%
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200 180
CMF CMC/CMF mixture
160 140 120 100 80 60 2.5
5.0
7.5
10.0
12.5
15.0
17.5
The dosage of MCA /g
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Fig. 2 Yields of CMF and CMC/CMF Mixture Relative to the Raw Fiber Material After
186
Carboxymethylation.
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3.1.2 Morphology and WRV. The comparison of morphology and water retention ability between
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SKF and CMF is shown in Table 2. The average length of fibers decreased slightly from 1.790 mm to
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1.485 mm after the carboxymethylation, while the average width of fibers increased from 30.5 µm to
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37.9 µm and the fines content increased from 2.84 % to 5.29 %. The morphological change of fibers
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could be attributed to the carboxymethylation, in which the original fiber structure was weakly
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destroyed and shortened. Consequently, CMF still maintained a good fiber morphology, although the
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fiber length slightly decreased and the fines content increased a little bit. The destruction of original
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fiber structure, along with the enhanced water-swollen ability and the extended transverse section of
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fibers improved the fiber accessibility and the reaction sites accordingly. Sim et al.
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fibers can absorb large amounts of water as individual micro fibrils swollen in all three
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Secondary-layers (S layers) and the width of swollen S-layers was up to 5-10 times more after the
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carboxymethylation. Furthermore, compared to SKF, the WRV of CMF dramatically increased from
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78.63 wt% to 289.87 wt%. As Kekäläinen et al. 33 reported, the WRV can indirectly represent the total
200
pore volume inside the fibers so that the increased WRV indicated the expansion of water-storage pore
201
volume of fibers. This inference was further confirmed by the pore volume test results (The pore
202
volume of fiber increased from 0.025 cm3/g to 0.041 cm3/g). Aarne et al.34 reported the CMC
203
adsorption on fibers which could introduce the carboxylic acid groups in Na-form to fibers, and the
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WRV of the CMC- adsorbed fibers increased in that case too. However, the CMC adsorption on fibers
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was lack of the stability compared to the CMF. The WRV and pore volume results further supported the
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conclusion that more hydrophilic carboxyl groups and open pores were available on the swollen CMF
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reported that the
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sample due to the carboxymethylation. Therefore, not only were there some good water pockets on
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fibers, but also improved accessibility and increased reaction sites on fibers, resulting from the
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carboxymethylation
210
for heavy metal ions removal and the result showed that the NaOH treatment of lignocellulosic
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materials can cause swelling and lead to an increase in internal surface area, thus improving the heavy
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metal ions adsorption and removal.
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32
. Wan et al.
35
reviewed several chemically modified plant wastes as adsorbents
Table 2. Morphology and WRV Properties of SKF and CMF Samples Length
Width
Fines content
WRV
Pore volume
/ mm
/ µm
/%
/%
/*10-2cm3/g
SKF
1.790±0.021
30.5±0.6
2.84±0.53
78.63±1.21
2.5±0.2
CMF
1.485±0.032
37.9±0.4
5.29±0.65
289.87±1.36
4.1±0.1
Sample
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3.1.3 XRD and FTIR. The XRD patterns of SKF and CMF are illustrated in Fig. 3. As seen in SKF
215
sample, two broad peaks and one intense peak respectively appeared at around 14.8°, 16.4° and 22.5°,
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which indicated the typical XRD pattern of cellulose I 36. The CMF sample showed an intense peak at
217
about 20.1° indicating that the native cellulose I was mercerized and transformed into the cellulose II
218
due to the high concentration of NaOH in carboxymethylation of SKF
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fibers would cause intra- and inter crystalline swelling, which results in the irreversible change of
220
cellulose crystalline structures. From the insert table in Fig. 3, the SKF sample, with regular crystalline
221
structure, showed a much higher crystallinity degree (54.69 %) than CMF sample (9.07 %). The low
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crystallinity degree of CMF was most likely caused by the effect of NaOH on the cellulose structure in
223
the carboxymethylation. The cleavage of hydrogen bonds between fibers when soaked in NaOH
224
solution increased the distance between cellulose molecules, which could remarkably facilitate the
225
substitution of MCA molecules on the cellulose, as compared to the cellulose without alkalization
226
As a result, the NaOH treatment largely increased the carboxyl group content. Moreover, it also
227
increased the fiber accessibility. Sim et al.
228
heavily disrupt the crystalline structure of cellulose fibers, hence significantly improving the solvent
229
accessibility to the fibers.
39
37
. The alkaline treatment of
38
.
also reported that the highly alkaline condition would
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Sample
Crystallinity/%
SKF
54.69
CMF
9.07
SKF
CMF
0
5
10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65
2Theta /°
231
Fig. 3 X-ray Diffractograms of Air-dried SKF and CMF.
232
The presence of abundant carboxyl groups introduced to fiber after carboxymethylation was also
233
verified by the FTIR results. As shown in Fig. 4, the infrared spectrum of fibers after
234
carboxymethylation exhibited no new adsorption peaks. The bands at 3440 cm−1 and 2920 cm−1 for
235
both SKF and CMF sample corresponded to the presence of the stretching vibration of –OH and C–H,
236
respectively 40. The peak at 1060 cm−1 was considered to be the characteristic of the C–O–C stretching
237
of the polysaccharide skeleton. Compared to SKF sample, the CMF sample exhibited stronger
238
adsorption bands of COO– at wavelengths of 1610 cm-1 (asymmetric stretching vibration) and 1420
239
cm-1 (symmetric stretching vibration), which provides the evidence of more carboxyl groups introduced
240
to the CMF 41. In the study of carboxymethylated cellulose hydrogel beads, Yang et al.
241
the bands at 1422 and 1608 cm-1 could be assigned to the symmetric and asymmetric stretching
242
vibration of COO-, respectively. From the insert table in Fig. 4, the CMF sample showed much higher
243
carboxyl content (104.28 meq/100g) than SKF (4.07 meq/100g), which supported the fact that more
244
carboxyl groups were introduced on CMF after carboxymethylation.
42
Sample Carboxyl content /meq/100 g SKF 4.07 CMF 104.28
SKF CMF
C=O 4000
245 246
3500
3000
2500
2000
Wavenumber /cm
1500
1000
500
-1
Fig. 4 FTIR Spectrum of Fiber before and after Carboxymethylation.
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reported that
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3.1.4 Microscopic Imaging Analyses. Shown in Fig. 5 are the LM and SEM images of SKF and
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CMF. As seen, the native SKF had regular structure and smooth surface (Fig. 5a), however, some
249
highly swollen balloons appeared on the fibers after the carboxymethylation (Fig. 5b).
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Carboxymethylation proceeded in a heterogeneous manner so that different sized balloons on fibers
251
were generated, which was caused by the heterogeneous damage of fiber intrinsic structure resulting in
252
different levels of swelling in aqueous system. The obtained hydrophilic balloons remarkably improved
253
the water adsorption capacity of CMF as water pockets. It is well known that the wood cell wall can be
254
divided into the middle lamella (ML), the primary wall (P), and the secondary wall (S)
255
with high lignin content, had been completely disintegrated in the pulping process, thereby, the primary
256
wall turned into the outer layer of the SKF in reserve. As shown in the magnified SEM images in Fig.
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5c, the SKF had regular fibers with nearly intact primary wall on the fiber surface. In the process of
258
carboxymethylation, the solvent penetrated into the fiber through the permeable primary wall resulting
259
in the dissolution of S2 wall by fragmentation. According to the study of Le Moigne et al. 45, the S2
260
wall was the easiest to dissolve, compared to the external walls which contain a larger amount of
261
non-cellulosic components. As the inner structure of fiber was gradually filled with solvent, the S1 wall
262
swelled transversely and subsequently the primary wall broke (as seen in Fig.5d) in one or more spots
263
under the swelling pressure, then rolled up forming threads (the thin lines laid down along the balloon
264
surface) and collars (rearrangement of the rolled primary wall around the fiber diameter)
265
several different sized balloons were formed. The surface of the unswollen sections of CMF (actually a
266
region between two balloons) demonstrated periodic vertical wrinkles (as indicated in the magnified
267
SEM images in Fig. 5d) indicating that the secondary layer of the fiber cell wall was exposed and a
268
fraction of wood cell walls of fibers were even broken into pieces (Fig. 5d) under the maximum
269
swelling stress. The swelling process of wood fibers was thoroughly investigated by Le Moigne et al. 46,
270
and they mentioned that the S2 wall could be fully dissolved and hold by the S1 wall (as the membrane
271
of the balloons), while the primary wall would form threads and collars surrounding the balloons.
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43, 44
. The ML,
46
. Finally,
Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
272
273 274
Fig. 5 LM and SEM Images of SKF and CMF: (a) Optical Micrographs of SKF; (b) Optical
275
Micrographs of CMF; (c) SEM Images of SKF; (d) SEM Images of CMF.
276
3.2 Removal of Copper Ions by CMF-based Filter Material by Adsorption
277
3.2.1 Adsorption Kinetics. The kinetic parameters and coefficient of determination (R2) of the first
278
and second adsorption for pseudo-second-order kinetic model are calculated and listed in Table 3. The
279
pseudo-first-order model fitted the experimental data with a R2 value of 0.9999 and the equilibrium
280
adsorption capacity obtained by fitting curves was very close to the actual adsorption capacity. As seen
281
in Fig. 6, the adsorption of copper ions onto CMF-based filter material was a highly efficient process,
282
which reached the adsorption equilibrium in 5 min. The results of the first and second adsorption
283
process showed that the equilibrium adsorption capacity of CMF decreased from 64.15 mg/g to 53.22
284
mg/g. Nonetheless, the adsorption rate was nearly constant. Therefore, the fast adsorption rate of the
285
CMF-based filter material for copper ions revealed its advantage when treating large amounts of copper
286
ions in a short contact time in a continuous flow system.
287
Table 3 Pseudo-second-order Kinetic Parameters for the Adsorption of CMF-based Filter Material for
288
Copper Ions.
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Parameter
k
qe
q
g/mg/min
mg/g
mg/g
The first adsorption
0.0426
64.23
64.15
0.9999
The second adsorption
0.0527
53.28
53.22
0.9999
r² Type
70 60 50
1.8 1.6
40
1.4 1.2
30
1.0
t /q
q t/mg/g
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research
0.8 0.6
20
0.4
The first adsorption The second adsorption
0.2
10
0.0 0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90 100
t /min
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90 100
t/min
289 290
Fig. 6 Adsorption Kinetics and Pseudo-second-order Curves of the CMF-based Filter Material in the
291
First and Second Adsorption for Copper Ions.
292
3.2.2 Adsorption isotherms. The equilibrium isotherms for the adsorption of copper ions by
293
CMF-based filter material at the temperature of 30 ºC in pH 6 are shown in Fig. 7. It can be noticed
294
that the adsorption capacity was increased with increasing equilibrium concentration and eventually
295
reached a saturated value, showing a concave curve tended to be a plateau. The equilibrium data were
296
fitted by Langmuir and Freundlich isotherm equations, respectively. The values of qm and KL were
297
determined by the slope and intercept of the linear plots of Ce /qe versus Ce (Fig. 8a) and the values of
298
KF and n were determined by the slope and intercept of the linear plot of lnqe versus lnCe (Fig. 8b). The
299
correlative isotherm parameters were summarized in Table 4. It can be seen that the Langmuir isotherm
300
shows a better fit to experimental data in comparison to the Freundlich isotherm due to the much higher
301
values of the coefficient of determination (R2) of the Langmuir isotherm, which indicated that the
302
adsorbed copper ions formed a monolayer coverage on the adsorbent surface47, 48. In other words, the
303
adsorption of copper ions accumulated on the adsorbent should have taken place at binding sites (or
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Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research
304
functional groups) on the CMF surface which should be accounted for monolayer sorption.
305
Table 4 Langmuir and Freundlich Model Parameters for Copper Ions Adsorption by the CMF-based
306
Filter Material. Langmuir model
Adsorbent
Freundlich model
qm (mg/g)
KL (L/mg)
R2
KF(L/mg)
n
R2
68.03
0.0720
0.993
1.1548
3.344
0.909
CMF
65 60 55
qe/mg/g
50 45 40 35 30 25
0
20
40
307
60
80
100
Ce/mg/L
308
Fig. 7 Equilibrium Isotherms for Copper Ions Adsorption by CMF-based Filter Material at 30 ºC and
309
Initial pH 6. 1.8
4.2
(a)
1.6
(b) 4.0
1.4 1.2
3.8
1.0
lnqe
C e/qe/(mg/g)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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0.8
3.6
0.6 3.4
0.4 0.2 0
20
40
310
60
80
100
3.2 2.0
2.5
3.0
Ce/(mg/L)
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
lnCe
311
Fig. 8 The Langmuir (a) and Freundlich (b) isotherm plots for Copper Ions adsorption by the
312
CMF-based Filter Material.
313
3.2.3 Recycling of CMF. Shown in Fig. 9 are the results of adsorption capacity of CMF filter
314
material in different regeneration times. It shows the adsorption capacity of fresh CMF filter material
315
was 64.15 mg/g, whereas its adsorption capacity decreased to 53.22 mg/g after the first-time
316
regeneration. The decreased adsorption capacity after regeneration was closely interrelated to the
317
treatment of filter material by hydrochloric acid (HCl). Before the acid treatment, the carboxyl groups
318
on the surface of fibers were in the form of carboxylate due to the alkaline condition in the CMF
319
preparation. The adsorption of heavy metal ions occurred as shown below:
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320
2RCOONa + M2+ → (RCOO)2M + 2Na+
321
When the copper ions-loading CMF filter material was treated with HCl, the linkage between CMF
322
and copper ions was cut off, and the adsorption sites on the surface of CMF were protonated, leaving
323
the copper ions in the acid aqueous phase rather than being adsorbed onto the fiber
324
first-time regeneration, the CMF, with reduced accessibility, was preserved in the protonated state even
325
though being washed by distilled water, thus its adsorption capacity would decrease. According to the
326
report from Kumar et al. 49, HCl treated rice husk showed lower adsorption capacity for cadmium than
327
the untreated counterpart. Low et al.
328
sorption capacity than the HCl-treated one.
50
(8)
35
. After the
reported that the NaOH-treated spent grain showed higher
329
The adsorption capacity of the CMF filter material for copper ions after fifth regeneration merely
330
decreased with 1.57 mg/g compared to that after the first regeneration, which displayed relatively
331
stable adsorption performance. This minor change from the second-use to the fifth-use in the
332
adsorption performance of the CMF filter material indicated that the reusability of CMF and its
333
application as efficient adsorbents for heavy metal ions removal in wastewater treatment are feasible
334
and promising. 70
64.15
60
53.22
53.15
53.02
52.88
52.65
1
2
3
4
5
50
q/mg/g
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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40 30 20 10 0
0
335
Regeneration times
336
Fig. 9 The Adsorption Capacity of Regenerated CMF Filter Material.
337
3.3 Concept of Preparation of the CMF Adsorbent Material and Its Application to Copper Ions
338
Removal via Adsorption. The preparation and adsorption process of the CMF filter material is shown
339
in Fig. 10. The pristine SKF was initially alkalified with NaOH to swell the fibers. Subsequently, the
340
alkali-treated fibers were etherified with MCA to introduce carboxymethyl groups onto the fibers. On
341
one hand, CMF, with hydrophilic carboxymethyl groups on fibers, could remarkably improve the
342
hydrophilicity of the fibers 51 and facilitate the complexation between fibers and copper ions during the
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343
follow-up wastewater treatment. The complexation induced by the large number of carboxyl groups
344
from carboxymethyl groups can rapidly result in stable coordination bonds between carboxyl groups
345
and copper ions 52-54, thus, the carboxyl-rich CMF is a good candidate for copper ions removal. On the
346
other hand, CMF, maintaining good fiber morphology, is readily made into a filter material. The length
347
of fibers was negligibly shortened because the mild carboxymethylation, while the transverse
348
heterogeneous swelling of CMF occurring in water led to balloon-like structure on fibers 55. Moreover,
349
in comparison to the ordinary fibers in water, the water-swollen CMF showed better accessibility to
350
copper ions and provided more reaction sites for complexation, which also contributes to the improved
351
adsorption capacity of CMF. Consequently, CMF filter material could be a promising one for
352
wastewater treatment due to its high carboxyl content as well as its good water-swollen structure.
353 354
Fig. 10 Schematic Illustration for the Preparation of the CMF Filter Material and Its Application to
355
Copper Ions Removal via the Adsorption Process.
356
4. CONCLUSIONS
357
In this work, carboxymethylated cellulose fiber (CMF), with high carboxyl content and reasonable
358
fiber morphology, was prepared and used to fabricate an adsorbent filter material. The characteristics of
359
the as-prepared CMF and the adsorption performance of the as-prepared CMF filter material were
360
investigated. Results showed that the optimized CMF sample (carboxymethylation at 10 g MCA) had
361
much higher carboxyl content and reasonable fiber morphology (larger fiber width and similar fiber
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362
length) compared to the original fibers. The CMF-based adsorbent filter material exhibited excellent
363
adsorption capacity for copper ions and good recycling performance. The adsorption equilibrium was
364
reached within 5 min due to its high adsorption rate.
365
■ AUTHOR INFORMATION
366
Corresponding Author
367
*E-mail:
[email protected] 368 369
Notes
370
■ ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
371
This work was financially supported by the Science and Technology Department of Shaanxi Province
372
(2017GY-184) and the Department of Education of Shaanxi Province (No. 15JS015)
373
■ REFERENCES
374 375
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
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