Incorporation of In2S3 Nanoparticles into a Metal-Organic Framework for Ultrafast Removal of Hg from Water.
Linfeng LiangLuyao LiuFeilong JiangCaiping LiuDa-Qiang YuanQihui ChenDong WuHai-Long JiangMao-Chun HongPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2018)
Considering rapidly rising Hg emission from industrial waste effluents, it is imperative to explore practical and effective adsorbents for Hg. Herein, a mild and facile method has been developed to confine ultrasmall In2S3 nanoparticles (about 2.5 nm) in the cavities of a MOF for the first time. The resulting composite (In2S3@MIL-101) can remove 99.95% of the Hg2+ from wastewater very efficiently in as short as 1 min with the highest distribution coefficient (2.2 × 107 mL g-1) among all MOF-based mercury adsorbents. It also displays excellent selectivity for Hg even when other interferential metal ions are present, and it can be reused with almost retained adsorption capacity. All of these features make the composite a potential adsorbent for Hg removal from industrial wastewater.
Keyphrases
- metal organic framework
- aqueous solution
- wastewater treatment
- fluorescent probe
- heavy metals
- living cells
- risk assessment
- magnetic resonance
- quantum dots
- photodynamic therapy
- mass spectrometry
- anaerobic digestion
- gold nanoparticles
- reduced graphene oxide
- diffusion weighted imaging
- water soluble
- walled carbon nanotubes