Subscriber access provided by UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO LIBRARIES
Article
Effective Recovery of Vanadium from Oil Refinery Waste into Vanadium-Based Metal–Organic Frameworks Guowu Zhan, Wei Cheng Ng, Wenlin Yvonne Lin, Shin Nuo Koh, and Chi-Hwa Wang Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b04989 • Publication Date (Web): 05 Feb 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 9, 2018
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 22
Environmental Science & Technology
1
Effective Recovery of Vanadium from Oil Refinery
2
Waste into Vanadium-Based Metal–Organic
3
Frameworks
4
Guowu Zhan,† Wei Cheng Ng,‡ Wenlin Yvonne Lin,† Shin Nuo Koh,§ and Chi-Hwa Wang*†
5 †
6
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, National University of Singapore, 4
7 8
Engineering Drive 4, 117585, Singapore ‡
NUS Environmental Research Institute, National University of Singapore, 1 Create Way, Create
9 10
Tower #15-02, 138602, Singapore §
Sembcorp Industries Ltd., 30 Hill Street #05-04, 179360, Singapore
11
Submitted to
12
Environmental Science & Technology
13
*Corresponding author, Tel.: +65-65165079, Fax: +65-67791936, E-mail address:
14
[email protected] 15
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
1
Environmental Science & Technology
16
Page 2 of 22
Graphical TOC Entry
17
18
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
2
Page 3 of 22
Environmental Science & Technology
19
ABSTRACT. Carbon black waste, an oil refinery waste, contains a high concentration of
20
vanadium (V) leftover from the processing of crude oil. For the sake of environmental
21
sustainability, it is therefore of interest to recover the vanadium as useful products instead of
22
disposing of it. In this work, V was recovered in the form of vanadium-based metal–organic
23
frameworks (V-MOFs) via a novel pathway by using the leaching solution of carbon black waste
24
instead of commercially available vanadium chemicals. Two different types of V-MOFs with
25
high levels of crystallinity and phase purity were fabricated in very high yields (>98%) based on
26
a coordination modulation method. The V-MOFs exhibited well-defined and controlled shapes
27
such as nanofibers (length: >10 µm) and nanorods (length: ~270 nm). Furthermore, the V-MOFs
28
showed high catalytic activities for the oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde, indicating
29
the strong potential of the waste-derived V-MOFs in catalysis applications. Overall, our work
30
offers a green synthesis pathway for the preparation of V-MOFs by using heavy metals of
31
industrial waste as the metal source.
32
KEYWORDS. Metal–organic frameworks, vanadium recovery, waste, catalysts, oil refinery.
33 34
■ Introduction
35
With the rapid growth of world population, the amount of resources consumed is increasing,
36
and inevitably so is the amount of industrial waste generated in order to meet the world’s
37
demand. These industrial wastes may contain components that still pose good market value but
38
not recovered due to technological or economic limitations.1 An economically feasible solution
39
for the recovery of metals from industrial wastes should therefore be developed as it is
40
considered an important aspect to move towards a sustainable society.2-4 For instance, vanadium
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
3
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 4 of 22
41
is present in crude oil, coal, oil shale and tar sands, and therefore is an unavoidable waste in the
42
oil refinery industry and oil-fired electrical power stations.5, 6According to the 2016 BP
43
Statistical Review of World Energy,7 Singapore is capable of processing 1.514 million barrels of
44
crude oil per day (1.6% share of the world’s total). In Singapore, the oil refinery industry
45
generates about 30 tons of carbon black waste (a type of petroleum coke) daily as an unavoidable
46
by-product from the cracking of crude oil. The carbon black waste was found to contain a high
47
concentration of V (>14000 ppm), which could be extracted by chemical leaching.8, 9 In 2013,
48
the global vanadium production from natural resources containing V (e.g., vanadium ore) was
49
roughly 151,000 tons, up 11% year on year. The expanding demand for vanadium has
50
encouraged researchers to recover the vanadium from the industrial wastes. Accordingly, the
51
carbon black waste can be a potential source of V metal, and we are interested in recovering and
52
converting the waste metal ions into vanadium based metal–organic frameworks (abbreviated as
53
V-MOFs).
54
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) or supramolecular coordination polymers with one-, two-,
55
or three-dimensional crystalline networks are a new class of functional self-assembly materials in
56
which the metal ions/clusters are bridged through diverse organic ligands.10 Generally, the V-
57
MOFs contain trivalent or tetravalent V as metal nodes.11, 12 MOFs have been reported to be
58
useful in a wide variety of applications such as CO2 adsorption,13-15 heterogeneous catalysts,16-18
59
cathode materials for lithium ion batteries,19 magnetic sensors,20 and membrane separation.21
60
The conventional approach of fabricating MOFs generally requires the use of expensive metal
61
ion precursors.22 In addition, the use of costly and non-reusable organic solvents further impedes
62
an economically feasible production of MOFs for industrial applications.23 For this
63
consideration, the proposed pathway of vanadium recovery into V-MOFs would be conducted in
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
4
Page 5 of 22
Environmental Science & Technology
64
aqueous solutions by directly using the leachate of carbon black waste as the solvent. This
65
strategy, besides being environmentally friendly, would also provide a feasible way to reduce the
66
cost of production by eliminating the need for organic solvents.
67
The coordination of multicarboxylic acids to metal ions is the most representative assembly
68
manner in building MOFs, in which the M−O−M serves as primary structural motif to form
69
extended networks.24-26 To implement this idea, in this work, the aqueous leaching solution of
70
carbon black waste was used to prepare V-MOFs, with multicarboxylic acids as the building
71
blocks (Figure 1a). Depending on the organic ligands employed, two different V-MOFs with
72
different crystal morphologies and orientations were synthesized, i.e., V-BDC product (one-
73
dimensional nanofiber) when using 1,4-benzenedicarboxylate (BDC2−) linker, and V-NDC
74
product (nanorod) when using 1,4-naphthalenedicarboxylate (NDC2−) linker. Additionally, we
75
demonstrated that the as-obtained V-MOFs are efficient heterogeneous catalysts for selective
76
benzyl alcohol oxidation in liquid-phase (see Figure 1b), which is an important oxidation
77
reaction from the viewpoint of establishing a green process for benzaldehyde production.
78
■ MATERIALS AND METHODS
79
Materials. Carbon black waste was collected from an oil refinery on Jurong Island in Singapore.
80
The
81
Benzenedicarboxylic acid (H2BDC, Aldrich, 98%), 1,4-Naphthalenedicarboxylic acid (H2NDC,
82
Alfa Aesar, 98%), vanadium chloride (Aldrich, 97%), cetyltrimethylammonium bromide
83
(CTAB, Fluka, 96%), sodium dithionite (Aldrich, 85%), hydrochloric acid (VWR Chemicals,
84
32%), sodium hydroxide (Merck, 99%), benzyl alcohol (Alfa Aesar, 99%), tertbutyl
following
chemicals
were
used
as
received
without
further
purification:1,4-
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
5
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 6 of 22
85
hydroperoxide (TBHP, Aldrich, 70% in H2O), n-dodecane (Alfa Aesar, 99%), ethyl acetate
86
(Merck, 99.5%), and toluene (J.T.Baker, 99.5%). Deionized water was used in all experiments.
87
Carbon black waste leaching solution. The moisture content in the as-received carbon black
88
waste was about 45.7 wt% (see the TGA curve in Figure S1). So, the sample was first dried in an
89
electric oven at 150oC for 12 h. Then, 2.5 g of the dry solid was dispersed in 50 mL of NaOH (1
90
M) by sonication (150 W) for 1 h. Afterward, the leaching solution was collected by a membrane
91
filter (Nylon, pore size: 0.45 µm) under vacuum filtration condition.
92
Synthesis of V-MOFs. For the synthesis of V-BDC, 4 mL of the leaching solution was mixed
93
with 4 mL of HCl solution (1 M). Then, 1 mL of sodium dithionite aqueous solution (0.5 M) was
94
added. The color of the solution changed immediately upon the addition of the reducing agent.
95
After stirring for 2 min, 80 mg of H2BDC linkers and 0.1 g of CTAB were added. The mixture
96
was thoroughly stirred at room temperature for 10 min before hydrothermal treatment in a
97
Teflon-lined steel autoclave (capacity: 25 mL) at 200oC for 15 h. The solid was collected by
98
centrifugation and washing for two times with water/ethanol to remove sulfurous impurity. As
99
for the synthesis of V-NDC, 80 mg of H2NDC was used following the same approach. Note that
100
V-MOFs prepared without adding CTAB were labeled as V-BDC-i and V-NDC-i, respectively (i
101
refers to the irregular shape of the products).
102
Catalytic performance evaluations. Firstly, V-MOFs were activated in static air at 280oC for
103
10 h before the tests. Afterwards, the benzyl alcohol oxidation reaction was carried out in a
104
magnetically stirred flask (capacity: 50 mL). Typically, the initial reaction mixture was
105
composed of 1 mmol of benzyl alcohol, 1 mmol of n-dodecane (as an internal standard), 2.5
106
mmol of TBHP, 15 mL of toluene, and 30 mg of V-MOF catalyst. At a specific time, 0.2 mL of
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
6
Page 7 of 22
Environmental Science & Technology
107
the sample was extracted with 1 mL of ethyl acetate. Catalyst solids were separated from the
108
reaction mixture by syringe filters (PTFE, pore size: 0.45µm). The extracts were subsequently
109
analyzed by a gas chromatography (GC).
110
Characterization Techniques. Morphologies of V-MOF samples were characterized by
111
scanning electron microscopy (SEM, JSM-6700F) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM,
112
JEM-2010). The crystallographic information was identified by selected-area electron diffraction
113
(SAED, JEM-2100F) and X-ray diffraction (XRD, Bruker D8 Advance) equipped with a Cu Kα
114
radiation source. The elemental mapping was carried out by energy-dispersive X-ray
115
spectroscopy (EDX, Oxford Instruments, Model 7426). Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) specific
116
surface areas of the samples, were calculated using N2 physisorption isotherms at 77 K
117
(Quantachrome NOVA-3000 system). The chemical compositions of the samples were analyzed
118
by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS, AXIS-HSi, Kratos Analytical). Thermogravimetric
119
analysis (TGA) studies were carried out on a thermobalance (TGA-2050, TA Instruments) with
120
flowing air atmosphere (flow rate: 50 mL/min) at a temperature ramping rate of 10°C/min. Metal
121
concentrations in leaching solutions were measured by inductively coupled plasma-atomic
122
emission spectrometry (ICP-OES, Optima 7300DV, Perkin Elmer).
123
resonance (NMR) solution spectra were recorded on a Bruker AV500 (500MHz) spectrometer.
124
■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
125
Synthesis of V-MOFs. The carbon black waste contains a significant amount of heavy metals,
126
such as vanadium (~14500 ppm), nickel (~3200 ppm), and iron (~1500 ppm). Chemical leaching
127
with sodium hydroxide is an effective method to recover the vanadium ions from the carbon
128
black waste. The concentration of V in the obtained leaching solution was determined as 705
51
V nuclear magnetic
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
7
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 8 of 22
129
ppm, and only trace amounts of Ni and Fe metal ions were detected (see Table S1). In this work,
130
5 wt% of carbon black waste solid was used in the leaching process. Therefore, the leaching
131
efficiency of vanadium was about 97.2%. It is worth noting that the leachate obtained may be
132
further recycled through a cycling leaching process to increase the concentration of V in the final
133
leaching solution (see Figure 1). Since the vanadium ions in the carbon black waste leaching
134
solution were mainly in +5 oxidation state as monomeric anion VO43− (refer to 51V NMR data in
135
Figure S2), VV was first reduced to VIII species by using sodium dithionite as a reducing agent.
136
This approach was similar to a previous study on the reductive transformation of V2O5 powders
137
to vanadium-based MOFs.27 Sodium dithionite is a widely used reductant in industry. It was
138
chosen due to its high driving force for reducing VV to VIII ions.28 After only 1 second of
139
reaction, the vanadate ions could be totally reduced as visualized from the color change of the
140
leaching solution from yellow to gray. It should be noted that some sulfite and sulfate impurities
141
may be present in the original MOF product,29 but these impurities can be easily removed by
142
water washing treatment, as checked by thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) shown in Figure S3.
143
Based on Figure 2a, one can see that the amount of sodium dithionite added is crucial to the
144
transformative yield of vanadium. As a control, without the addition of sodium dithionite, no
145
MOFs was formed because VV cannot be used to build MOFs. It was found that 0.6 mL of
146
sodium dithionite (0.5 M) was the optimal value to achieve ~99% yield of V-BDC. Similarly, the
147
yield for V-NDC was around 99.4% under the same circumstances. As expected, there was no
148
solid product formed in the absence of organic linker even though the reducing agent was added.
149
This observation further confirms that the coordination reactions between leaching solution and
150
organic linkers produce MOFs in good yield. In addition, the production of V-MOFs was easily
151
scalable using the same set of synthesis parameters (see the result in Figure S4). However, it was
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
8
Page 9 of 22
Environmental Science & Technology
152
found that ascorbic acid was not an effective reducing agent for the transformation, as a
153
significant amount (99%) of vanadium ions remained in the solution.
154
Morphology control of V-MOFs. The morphology and size of the prepared V-BDC and V-
155
NDC products were observed by SEM and TEM, as displayed in Figure 3. Interestingly, the
156
derived V-BDC and V-NDC showed distinctly different shapes of nanofiber and nanorod,
157
respectively. For example, the length of V-BDC nanofiber was typically larger than tens of
158
micrometers with an average diameter of 40 nm. On the other hand, V-NDC exhibited short
159
nanorod shape with an average length of 270 nm and diameter of 64 nm. EDX elemental maps
160
further confirmed the chemical compositions of the prepared V-MOFs and also showed that V,
161
C, and O were evenly distributed across the entire structures (Figure 3d,h). Albeit no difference
162
in vanadium recovery rate, V-MOFs samples synthesized without CTAB (viz., V-BDC-i, and V-
163
NDC-i) had an irregular shape with a broad size distribution, as presented in Figure S5. It is well
164
known that CTAB, a capping agent, has frequently been used to control the morphology of MOF
165
crystals by adjusting growth rates of different facets via the electrostatic interactions between
166
CTA+ and the deprotonated carboxylic groups.30 In addition, it was also found that CTAB would
167
facilitate the dissolution of organic linkers in aqueous solution, probably due to their van der
168
Waals interactions. In control experiments, we also used VCl3 as precursors for preparing V-
169
MOFs. Indeed, the as-synthesized V-BDC and V-NDC displayed similar shapes of nanofibers
170
and nanorods, respectively (Figure S6). However, in the case of fabrications from VCl3, the
171
vanadium yields for V-BDC-i, V-BDC, V-NDC-i, and V-NDC were only 49.7%, 29.9%, 44.8%,
172
and 35.1%, respectively (Figure 2b). The enhanced yields by using leaching solutions in the
173
recovery process were probably due to two factors: (i) the lower pH value of the synthesis
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
9
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 10 of 22
174
solution offered a more suitable environment for recovery, and (ii) the reduction process
175
promoted the coordination between VIII ions and the organic ligands.
176
Crystal structures of V-MOFs. According to XRD pattern in Figure 2c, the designed V-BDC
177
is [VIII(OH)(BDC)](H2BDC)x, which is known as MIL-47as and the asterisk marks the Bragg
178
peaks belonging to the included guest H2BDC ligands. Upon activation in static air at 280oC for
179
10 h, MIL-47as can be converted to VIV(O)(BDC) (or known as MIL-47, one of the most studied
180
V-MOF materials) with high levels of crystallinity by removing the free organic linkers, along
181
with the oxidation of VIII ions to VIV ions and the conversion of VIII–OH bonds to vanadyl
182
(VIV=O) bonds. Interestingly, N2 physisorption measurements at 77 K revealed a drastic increase
183
in the BET surface area and pore volume as the filled linkers were removed upon activation
184
(SBET: 6.91 vs 408.3 m2 g-1; pore volume: 0.02 vs 0.21 cm3 g-1 referring to Figure S7). Besides
185
this, the orthorhombic crystal system of V-BDC was also confirmed from the SAED pattern
186
(Figure 4a), in which the series of spots can be attributed to (022), (101), and (123)
187
crystallographic planes with the respective d-spacing of 0.55 nm, 0.61 nm, and 0.35 nm.12 The
188
angle between the (022) and (101) spots is 71°, consistent with the theoretical value in the crystal
189
structure. The SAED pattern also indicates that the nanofibers observed are oriented almost
190
along the [11-1] zone axis with a single crystalline nature, and the reflections exhibit the
191
most intense diffraction spots. As also verified from XRD pattern (Figure 2d), the prepared V-
192
NDC is isostructural to [Al(OH)(NDC)].31 The presence of several peaks in the range (5 to 40o)
193
is due to the substitution of (AlIIIOH)2+ sites by (VIIIOH)2+ sites.27 Different from V-BDC, there
194
was no significant change in XRD patterns of V-NDC before and after activation treatments
195
(Figure S8), indicating that crystalline structure of V-NDC was guest-free and the larger H2NDC
196
molecules were unlikely possible to be captured within the pores. The BET surface area of V-
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
10
Page 11 of 22
Environmental Science & Technology
197
NDC after activation treatment was around 300 m2 g-1, comparable to the value of Al-NDC.32
198
Likewise, the tetragonal crystal system of V-NDC was confirmed from the SAED pattern,31 in
199
which the reflections of (200), (101), and (301) are clearly visible (Figure 4b). The surface angle
200
between the (200) and (101) facets is 73°, matching well with the crystal structure. Similar to
201
most other MOFs,33 the V-BDC and V-NDC frameworks would partially degrade under high
202
energy electron-beam irradiation, as the mentioned SAED diffraction spots were no longer
203
evident after 30 seconds of illumination (Figure S9). In both V-MOFs, small changes in MOF
204
crystal structures were found when CTAB surfactant was added to modulate the product shapes.
205
TGA and XPS Characterizations. The thermal stability of the as-prepared V-MOFs was
206
studied by TGA. Results shown in Figure 2e demonstrated that V-MOF structures were quite
207
stable up to 300°C in air atmosphere. There was no noticeable difference between the different
208
MOF crystals, and it was observed that the frameworks decomposed in the temperature range of
209
300–400 °C, which led to the formation of V2O5 as residue. The molar ratios of V metal ions to
210
organic linkers (either BDC2− or NDC2−) were close to 1: 1 in all the four MOFs, which matched
211
well with the formulas. Moreover, the reduction of vanadate in leaching solution by sodium
212
dithionite was further confirmed from XPS characterization of the V-MOFs. As revealed in
213
Figure 2f, all the V2p3/2 levels exhibited a binding energy of 515.8±0.2 eV, indicating the
214
presence of VIII rather than VV ions in the frameworks. The difference in binding energies (∆)
215
between the O1s and V2p3/2 levels was around 15 eV, which matched well with the reported
216
value (14.71 eV).20, 34 The XPS V2p3/2 levels of V-MOFs after activation treatments (280oC for
217
10 h) are shown in Figure S10, indicating that vanadium ions in the frameworks were oxidized to
218
VIV having a binding energy of 516.6 eV.35 The XPS peak deconvolution analysis indicates that
219
the ratios of VIV/(VIV+VIII) were 88.9% and 90.0% in V-BDC and V-NDC samples, respectively.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
11
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 12 of 22
220
Catalytic performances of V-MOFs. Benzaldehyde is an important intermediate to many
221
organic compounds, and it can be produced from the catalytic oxidation of benzyl alcohol in
222
liquid-phase.36, 37 Herein, the catalytic performance of our prepared V-MOFs (V-BDC, V-BDC-i,
223
V-NDC, and V-NDC-i) was evaluated for this reaction. Firstly, a control study of the oxidative
224
reaction in the absence of V-MOFs showed only minor background reaction (