Abstract

Aluminum-based adsorbents, simply prepared by eluting the lithium-aluminum layered double hydroxide precursors with deionized water, is the only industrialized adsorbents for selectively separating Li+ from saline brines. Taking the roles of lattice and surface Li+ active sites on its performances into consideration, influence of ending pH modulating on prominently improving the adsorbing capacity and stability of aluminum-based adsorbents prepared by precipitation method is initially investigated. As experimentally evidenced that, the maximum desorption amount of Li+ at the eluting stage should be controlled to around 20 mg/g Li+ rather than thoroughly removed to effectively avoid the topotactic solid-phase transformation from adsorbent to α-Al(OH)3. As-prepared adsorbents not only has high adsorption capacity up to 8.4 mg/g in 400 ppm LiCl solution, but also owns unique self-healing ability, thus promising the excellent cycling stability. It is firstly proposed that the formation of the layer-structured precursor by precipitation method is well in accordance with the three-step formation mechanism and pH modulating mainly contributes to the anions exchange between solution Cl- and interlayer OH–. This study experimentally proves the importance of pH adjusting for preparing high performance lithium adsorbents by precipitation method, which is very significant and important for effectively extracting lithium resources from the complicated multi-component liquid minerals.

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