Preparation of Activated Carbon Supported Bead String Structure Nano Zero Valent Iron in a Polyethylene Glycol-Aqueous Solution and Its Efficient Treatment of Cr(VI) Wastewater.
Chunlei JiaoXiao TanAijun LinWenjie YangPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2019)
Nanometer zero-valent iron (nZVI) has been widely used in the treatment of heavy metals such as hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)). A novel composite of bead string-structured nZVI on modified activated carbon (nZVI-MAC) is prepared here, using polyethylene glycol as the stable dispersant rather than traditional ethanol during the loading process. The microstructure characterization shows that nZVI particles are loaded on MAC with a bead string structure in large quantity and stably due to the addition of hydroxyl functional groups on the surface by polyethylene glycol. Experiments on the treatment of Cr(VI) in wastewater show that the reaction process requires only 20 min to achieve equilibrium. The removal rate of Cr(VI) with a low concentration (80-100 mg/L) is over 99% and the maximum saturation removal capacity is up to 66 mg/g. The system converts Cr(VI) to trivalent chromium (Cr(III)) through an oxidation-reduction effect and forms an insoluble material with iron ions by coprecipitation, which is then adsorbed on the surface of the nZVI-MAC. The process conforms to the quasi-second order adsorption kinetics equation (mainly chemical adsorption process).