Loading…

Synergistic co-removal of zinc(II) and cefazolin by a Fe/amine-modified chitosan composite

A novel Fe/amine modified chitosan composite (Fe/N-CS) was facilely synthesized and showed great potential in the efficient co-removal of heavy metal ions and antibiotics from wastewater. [Display omitted] A novel Fe/amine modified chitosan composite (Fe/N-CS) was facilely synthesized and showed hig...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Chinese chemical letters 2019-12, Vol.30 (12), p.2196-2200
Main Authors: Ling, Chen, Zhao, Yixuan, Ren, Zixi, Han, Jiangang, Zhu, Changqing, Liu, Fu-Qiang
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:A novel Fe/amine modified chitosan composite (Fe/N-CS) was facilely synthesized and showed great potential in the efficient co-removal of heavy metal ions and antibiotics from wastewater. [Display omitted] A novel Fe/amine modified chitosan composite (Fe/N-CS) was facilely synthesized and showed higher affinity to both Zn(II) and cefazolin (CEF) than its precursors. Synergistic co-adsorption of them by Fe/N-CS was observed in varied conditions. The adsorption amount maximally increased by 100.1% for Zn and 68.2% for CEF in bi-solute systems. The initial adsorption rate of Zn(II) also improved with CEF. The increasing temperature facilitated coadsorption. The results of the preloading tests, FTIR/XPS characterizations and DFT calculations suggested that (1) both polyamines and Fe sites participated in the adsorption of Zn(II) and CEF, (2) Zn(II) could serve as a new efficient site for CEF, forming [amine-Zn-CEF]/[FeOH-Zn-CEF] ternary complexes, and (3) the co-presence of CEF shielded the electrostatic repulsion between protonated amines and Zn(II), contributing to the enhancement of Zn(II) adsorption. Further, the ion strength exerted positive and negative influences on the adsorption of Zn(II) and CEF, respectively. Additionally, CEF and Zn(II) were successively recovered by 0.1 mol/L NaOH followed by 2 mmol/L HCl. Fe/N-CS could be stably reused five times. The findings imply that Fe/N-CS is promising for the highly efficient co-removal of concurrent heavy metals and antibiotics.
ISSN:1001-8417
1878-5964
DOI:10.1016/j.cclet.2019.09.035