1 research outputs found
Efficient Removal and Recovery of Ag from Wastewater Using Charged Polystyrene-Polydopamine Nanocoatings and Their Sustainable Catalytic Application in 4‑Nitrophenol Reduction
This study addresses the long-standing
challenges of removing and
recovering trace silver (Ag) ions from wastewater while promoting
their sustainable catalysis utilization. We innovatively developed
a composite material by combining charged sulfonated polystyrene (PS)
with a PDA coating. This composite serves a dual purpose: effectively
removing and recovering trace Ag+ from wastewater and enabling
reused Ag for sustainable applications, particularly in the catalytic
reduction of 4-nitrophenol (4-NP) to 4-aminophenol (4-AP). The PS–PDA
demonstrated exceptional selectivity to trace Ag+ recycling,
which is equal to 14 times greater than the commercial ion exchanger.
We emphasize the distinct roles of different charged functional groups
in Ag+ removal and catalytic reduction performance. The
negatively charged SO3H groups exhibited the remarkable
ability to rapidly enrich trace Ag ions from wastewater, with a capacity
2–3 times higher than that of positively-N+(CH3)3Cl and netural-CH2Cl-modified composites;
this resulted in an impressive 96% conversion of 4-NP to 4-AP within
just 25 min. The fixed-bed application further confirmed the effective
treatment capacity of approximately 4400 L of water per kilogram of
adsorbent, while maintaining an extremely low effluent Ag+ concentration of less than 0.1 mg/L. XPS investigations provided
valuable insights into the conversion of Ag+ ions into
metallic Ag through the enticement of negatively charged SO3H groups and the in situ reduction facilitated by
PDA. This breakthrough not only facilitates the efficient extraction
of Ag from wastewater but also paves the way for its environmentally
responsible utilization in catalytic reactions