Abstract
Arsenates, when present in water resources, constitute a risk to human health. In order to remove them, various technologies have been developed; out of them, sorption approach is widely adopted employing a wide spectrum of suitable sorbent materials. Nanoparticles of iron oxide are frequently used due to a high surface area and ability to control them by external magnetic field. In this work, we report on a simple and cheap synthesis of ultrafine iron(III) oxide nanoparticles with a narrow size distribution and their exploitation in the field of arsenate removal from aqueous environment. It is shown that the adsorption capacity is enhanced by a mesoporous nature of nanoparticle arrangement in their system due to strong magnetic interactions they evolve between nanoparticles. A complete arsenate removal is achieved at Fe/As ratio equal to ∼20/1 and at pH in the range from 5 to 7.6. Under these conditions, the arsenates are completely removed within several minutes of treatment. Among iron-oxide-based nanosystems synthesized and employed in arsenate remediation issues so far, our assembly of iron(III) oxide nanoparticles shows the highest Freundlich adsorption coefficient and equilibrium sorption capacity under conditions maintained. Taking into account simple and low-cost preparation procedure, product high yields, almost monodispersed character, room-temperature superparamagnetic behavior, and strong magnetic response under small applied magnetic fields, the synthesized iron(III) oxide nanoparticles can be regarded as a promising candidate for exploitation in the field of removing undesired toxic pollutants from various real water systems.
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