Sustained Tl(I) removal by α-MnO: Dual role of tunnel structure incorporation and surface catalytic oxidation.

J Hazard Mater

Key Laboratory of Eco-environments in Three Gorges Reservoir Region, Ministry of Education, College of Environment and Ecology, Chongqing University, Chongqing 400044, China.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Manganese oxide-based filtration is an effective, cost-efficient method for removing thallium from engineered systems, although there are gaps in understanding its long-term effectiveness.
  • α-MnO demonstrated a high potential for thallium removal, showing a significant increase in irreversible removal rates (81%-95%) over a 584-hour period under various conditions.
  • The study reveals critical mechanisms, such as the oxidation of thallium, driven by surface Mn(III)-O interactions, highlighting how different environmental factors influence thallium binding and removal effectiveness in manganese oxide systems.

Article Abstract

Manganese oxide-based filtration technologies are considered cost-effective for thallium (Tl) removal in engineered systems. However, current gaps in understanding the heterogeneous adsorption and oxidation mechanisms of typical tunneled α-MnO may lead to a serious underestimation of its long-term Tl removal potential. In this study, α-MnO could continuously remove Tl(I) during the 584-h reaction, with its irreversible removal eventually increasing to 81 %-95 % in different anionic environments. The adsorbed low-loaded Tl(I) is preferentially oxidized, whereas the high-loaded Tl tends to be adsorbed in a nonoxidative pathway by α-MnO. The nonoxidized Tl(I) was gradually immobilized in the stable thalliomelane-like tunnel structure. More importantly, the synergism of surface Mn(III)-oxygen vacancies (O) on α-MnO could catalyze the oxidation of Tl(I). Furthermore, the oxidized Tl(III) was bound to the tunnel surface via double edge-sharing and double corner-sharing. In addition, the phosphate anion occupied the surface active site and inhibited the oxidation of Tl(I), thereby reducing the binding strength of Tl. This study provides a new perspective on the effectiveness and stability of Tl(I) removal by MnO and highlights the neglected mechanism of Mn(III)-O mediating Tl(I) oxidation, which expands our understanding of the removal and transformation fate of Tl in MnO-engineered systems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2025.137137DOI Listing

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