Abstract

Toxic dyes have threatened human health through the consumption of polluted water, so removal of dyes from wastewater has become a hot topic in both academic and industrial fields. Herein, we reported a kind of cellulose–clay hydrogel with superabsorbent properties, superior mechanical performance, and high dye removal efficiency. The main strategy for the preparation of superabsorbent hydrogels was chemical cross-linking of cellulose, carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), and the intercalated clay in NaOH/urea aqueous solution. The as-prepared hydrogels exhibited high absorption capacity for methylene blue (MB) solution through a spontaneous physic-sorption process which fitted well with pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm models. The maximum removal efficiencies of hydrogel samples for MB solutions with concentrations of 10 mg L–1 and 100 mg L–1 were 96.6% and 98%, respectively. These results demonstrated that cellulose–clay nanocomposite hydrogels were effective adsorbents for removal of MB dyes, which ...

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