Abstract

Millimeter-sized (∼3.5 mm) sodium alginate-silica composite spheres with macroporous structure and functional groups of amino- (NH2-SiO2/SA) and sulfhydryl (SH-SiO2/SA), respectively, were successfully prepared by a simple hydrothermal copolycondensation. The obtained materials were characterized by FT-IR, SEM, XPS, N2 adsorption-desorption techniques, and their heavy metal ion adsorption performance was evaluated in detail under different conditions. Characterization results revealed that the functional group plays a key role in the selectivity of metal ions, that is, NH2-SiO2/SA preferentially adsorbs the relatively hard Pb(II) ions while SH-SiO2/SA favors the softer Ag(I) ion, which is attributed to the fact that S atoms are softer donor than N atoms. The adsorption kinetics and the adsorption equilibrium fitted well with the pseudo-second-order model and Langmuir adsorption isotherms, respectively. The adsorption experiments showed the maximum adsorption capacities of Pb(II) for NH2-SiO2/SA and Ag(I) for SH-SiO2/SA are 460 mg/g and 417 mg/g, respectively, giving good stability without a significant decrease in 5 recycles. Therefore, the synthesized materials display promising adsorbents for recycling heavy metal pollutants from wastewater due to their good selectivity, high adsorption capacity, stability and easy recovery due to their large size.

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