Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A | 2019

Synthetic sodalite doped with silver nanoparticles: Characterization and mercury (II) removal from aqueous solutions

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract In this work, a novel silver nanoparticles-doped synthetic sodalitic composite was synthesized and characterized using advanced characterization methods, namely TEM-EDS, XRD, SEM, XRF, BET, zeta potential, and particle size analysis. The synthesized nanocomposite was used for the removal of Hg2+ from 10\u2009ppm aqueous solutions of initial pH equal to 2. The results showed that the sodalitic nanocomposites removed up to 98.65% of Hg2+, which is ∼16% and 70% higher than the removal achieved by sodalite and parent coal fly ash, respectively. The findings revealed that the Hg2+ removal mechanism is a multifaceted mechanism that predominantly involves adsorption, precipitation and Hg-Ag amalgamation. The study of the anions effect (Cl−, NO3−, C2H3O2−, and SO42−) indicated that the Hg2+ uptake is comparatively higher when Cl− anions co-exist with Hg2+ in the solution.

Volume 54
Pages 951 - 959
DOI 10.1080/10934529.2019.1611129
Language English
Journal Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A

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