Highly selective capture of palladium from acidic solution by sulfur-functionalized porous carbon microspheres: performance and mechanism†
Abstract
Efficient recovery of palladium (Pd) from waste sources is of paramount importance due to its limited natural reserves and potential environmental hazards. Herein, a carbon sorbent, namely sulfur-functionalized porous carbon microspheres (SPCMs), was used to selectively capture Pd(II) from acidic solution. SPCMs exhibited high efficiency for the adsorption separation of Pd(II) from 0.5 M to 6 M HNO3 solution. The adsorption kinetics of Pd(II) matched well with the pseudo-second-order model. The adsorption reached equilibrium after 130 minutes and the adsorption capacity of Pd(II) was 79.3 mg g−1 in 1 M HNO3 solution. The Freundlich isotherm model exhibited a better description of the Pd(II) adsorption, suggesting that the Pd(II) adsorption is a multilayer adsorption process. SPCMs showed a high selectivity for the capture of Pd(II) in simulated acidic wastewater with 26 metal ions, and the selectivity increased with the increase of HNO3 concentration. The adsorption capacity per US dollar of Pd(II) by SPCMs from HNO3 solution is much higher than those of previously reported sorbents, exhibiting a high economic viability of SPCMs for Pd(II) capture from acidic solution. The adsorbed Pd(II) could be desorbed using 1.0 M thiourea and 0.1 M HNO3, and the SPCM sorbent maintained a high adsorption capacity after five adsorption–desorption cycles. Characterization and theoretical calculations revealed that the adsorption of Pd(II) on the SPCM sorbent is dominated by the coordination of [Pd(NO3)2] with O/S containing groups and some of the Pd(II) is reduced to Pd(0). The excellent adsorption performance of SPCMs provides a feasible and low-cost strategy for the selective recovery of Pd(II) from acidic wastewater.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Nanomaterial applications in water