Abstract

A composite polymer (made of gelatin and alginate) was used for the synthesis of Cyphos IL 101-immobilized resins. These resins (with varying size and different ionic liquid (IL) content) have been tested for the recovery of mercury from concentrated HCl solutions (0.1–5 M HCl concentrations). Prior to the study of sorption performance on resins, the reactivity of Cyphos IL 101 versus mercury was tested using solvent extraction methodology. These results showed that the extraction was hardly affected by the concentration of HCl and that an ion exchange mechanism was probably involved in metal recovery (binding of HgCl4 2-). The performance of these resins for Hg(II) recovery was tested through sorption isotherms and uptake kinetics, investigating the effect of resin size, ionic liquid content, metal concentration, agitation speed, and resin state (dry state versus wet state). Sorption capacity (which was proportional to the IL content) can reached up to 150 mg Hg g−1 in 1 M HCl; this sorption capacity was decreased by increasing chloride concentration. The kinetics were described well by the pseudo-second order equation and by the intraparticle diffusion equation (the so-called Crank's equation). The intraparticle diffusion coefficient was in the range of 10−11–1.2 × 10−10 m2 min−1. The kinetic profiles were controlled by the IL content, sorbent dosage, and the sorbent particle size. Drying of the resins significantly decreased diffusion rates in the resins. The presence of competitor metals did not affect sorption capacity except when stable chloro-anionic species such as in the case of Zn(II) were formed. Mercury can be desorbed using 6 M nitric acid solutions; and the sorbent can be recycled for at least six sorption/desorption cycles without significant decrease in the sorption performance.

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