Recycling vanadium from alternative sources is essential due to its expanding demand, depletion in natural sources, and environmental issues with terrestrial mining. Here, we present a complexation-precipitation method to selectively recover pentavalent vanadium ions, V(V), from complex metal ion mixtures, using an acid-stable metal binding agent, the cyclic imidedioxime, naphthalimidedioxime (HCID). HCID showed high extraction capacity and fast binding towards V(V) with crystal structures showing a 1:1 M:L dimer, [V(O)(CHNO)], 1, and 1:2 M:L non-oxido, [V(CHNO)] complex, 2. Complexation selectivity studies showed only 1 and 2 were anionic, allowing facile separation of the V(V) complexes by pH-controlled precipitation, removing the need for solid support. The tandem complexation-precipitation technique achieved high recovery selectivity for V(V) with a selectivity coefficient above 3 × 10 from synthetic mixed metal solutions and real oil sand tailings. Zebrafish toxicity assay confirmed the non-toxicity of 1 and 2, highlighting HCID's potential for practical and large-scale V(V) recovery.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10960790 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46958-6 | DOI Listing |
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