It
remains a big challenge to develop high-efficiency and low-cost adsorption
materials to remove toxic heavy metal ions in water. Here, we developed
a template-free synthesis method to fabricate high surface area and
large pore size magnesium silicate hierarchical nanostructures in
a mixed solvent of ethanol and water and carefully investigated the
corresponding adsorption behavior for Pb2+, Zn2+, and Cu2+ in aqueous solution. The results reveal that
the ethanol volume fraction in the solvent plays an important role
to optimize the pore structure, which directly determines the adsorption
capacity and the adsorption rate for heavy metal ions. When the ethanol
volume fraction is beyond 50%, the obtained magnesium silicate presents
a flowerlike structure with a hierarchical pore distribution: 0.5–2,
2–30, and 30–200 nm. When the ethanol volume faction
is 90%, for example, the sample exhibits a maximum adsorption capacity
of 436.68, 78.86, and 52.30 mg/g for Pb2+, Zn2+, and Cu2+ ions, which has a BET surface area of 650.50
m2/g and an average pore diameter of 6.89 nm, respectively.
Also, the sample presents excellent repeated adsorption performance
after three elutions. The obtained materials show widely promising
and practical applications in water treatment in a wide pH range from
2.8 to 5.8