In response to the ever increasing need to develop more efficient and sustainable methods for removing heavy metal contaminants from aqueous systems, the following article reports on the design of highly mesoporous alginate-derived materials (Starbon) and their application to the adsorption of heavy metals. Using the Starbon process to expand, dry and pyrolyse an inherently porous polysaccharide precursor, it was possible to produce mesoporous materials (BJH mesopore volumes 0.81-0.94 cm g) with large surface areas (157-297 m g) across a range of low pyrolysis temperatures (200-300 °C). The mechanisms of thermal decomposition were explored in terms of chemical and structural changes using N-sorption porosimetry, thermogravimetric analysis, titration, FT-IR spectroscopy and C NMR spectroscopy. It was found that, as a result of intermolecular dehydration and crosslinking, sufficient chemical stability is obtained by the intermediate temperature of 250 °C, with limited improvement seen at higher temperatures. In addition, the materials retained large metal adsorption capacities (0.70-1.72 mmol g) as well as strong selectivity for Cu ions (over Co and Ni), as compared to commercial petrochemical-derived cation exchange resin Amberlite™ Mac 3H. Thus, highlighting the potential of Starbon materials as a sustainable answer to the widespread problem of heavy metal-contaminated wastewaters.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cssc.202400015 | DOI Listing |
ChemSusChem
September 2024
Department of Chemistry, University of York, Heslington, York, YO10 5DD, UK.
In response to the ever increasing need to develop more efficient and sustainable methods for removing heavy metal contaminants from aqueous systems, the following article reports on the design of highly mesoporous alginate-derived materials (Starbon) and their application to the adsorption of heavy metals. Using the Starbon process to expand, dry and pyrolyse an inherently porous polysaccharide precursor, it was possible to produce mesoporous materials (BJH mesopore volumes 0.81-0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Methods
March 2021
Guangxi Key Laboratory of Natural Polymer Chemistry and Physics, Nanning Normal University, Nanning 530001, P. R. China.
Three-dimensional hierarchically porous carbon (denoted as SA-900) with a microporous, mesoporous and macroporous structure was facilely fabricated via direct carbonization of sodium alginate. SA-900 was fully characterized by N adsorption-desorption, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy to confirm its structure. SA-900 was coated onto a glassy carbon electrode surface to construct an ultrasensitive electrochemical sensing platform (SA-900/GCE).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
January 2015
Department of Chemistry, University of Allahabad, Allahabad-211002, India.
Present communication reports on the synthesis and characterization of Hg(II) sorbing millimeter sized porous titania spheres (TSP). The synthesis utilizes guar gum-alginate hybrid beads as sacrificial template to polymerize titanium(IV) isopropoxide. The hybrid beads are crafted by pouring guar-alginate mixed solution to calcium bath.
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