Abstract

• UFCA was prepared by carbonization and activation of urea-formaldehyde resin. • UFCA-900 was used to adsorb quinoline, phenol and pyridine with high capacities. • Membrane adsorption reactor with UFCA-900 continuously remove quinoline. • The mechanism is electrostatic interactions, π-π interactions and hydrogen bonds. Considering the highly toxic by-products generation and environmental friendliness, the adsorption process is a suitable solution as the end of pipe treatment for refractory organics in coking wastewater. Nitrogen-doped micro-mesoporous carbon prepared by carbonization and KOH activation of urea–formaldehyde resin (UFCA) realized effective adsorption of quinoline, phenol and pyridine in coking wastewater. Among them, UFCA-900 has large specific surface area (S BET = 1469.94 m 2 g −1 ) and excellent adsorption properties: the adsorption removal rate of quinoline reached 98.40% about 16 min, and the maximum adsorption capacity of quinoline was 721.90 mg·g −1 at 318 K, the adsorption capacity of phenol and pyridine at 298 K were 341.59 mg·g −1 and 225.08 mg·g −1 , respectively. The adsorption kinetics of UFCA-900 obeyed the pseudo-second-order model, and the adsorption process was endothermic. The membrane adsorption reactor demonstrated efficient adsorption, well separation, and negligibly irreversible membrane fouling. The adsorption mechanism included electrostatic interactions, π-π interactions and hydrogen bonds. Regeneration test proved that the removal rate of the chemically regenerated UFCA-900 was similar to the fresh adsorbent after six cycles. Taken together, a simple strategy for in-situ nitrogen-doped porous carbon has been developed and the resultant composite UFCA-900 has promising application prospect in coking wastewater treatment.

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