Abstract

Porous geopolymers have attracted widespread attention as promising heavy metal adsorbents that can be synthesized from aluminosilicate solid wastes. However, the precise microstructural evidence for adsorbed heavy metals on geopolymers remains unclear due to the insensitivity of conventional characterization techniques on minerals with amorphous structure and surface disorder. Batch adsorption and column experiments coupled with X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), Zn stable isotope, and surface complexation model (SCM) were employed to reveal the Zn removal mechanisms with coal fly ash porous geopolymer (CFAPG) at a molecular scale. The macroscopic kinetic and isothermal adsorption of Zn on CFAPG were well described by the pseudo-second-order model and Bi_Langmuir equation, respectively, indicating the presence of abundant heterogeneous active sites on the CFAPG surface. Two types of active sites on the CFAPG surface were identified by XAS coupled with Zn isotopes in batch experiments at pH ≤ 6.0: one is pH-dependent and associated with tetrahedral zinc coordination, and the other is pH-insensitive and associated with octahedral zinc coordination; these sites were confirmed by the bidentate SCM as the variable charge site (surface complexation, >S-OH) and the permanent negative charge site (cation exchange, >X–), respectively. Furthermore, the important contribution of surface co-precipitation besides surface complexation and cation exchange to the Zn adsorption on CFAPG was identified by XAS coupled with SCM in a flow-through column experiment at pH >6.0. These investigations provide a systemic understanding of the Zn adsorption mechanisms on CFAPG and an SCM reference for the application and prediction of geopolymers in heavy metal-contaminated water remediations.

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