Abstract
A facile and efficient way to decontaminate mercury(ii) polluted water with the aid of magnetic, highly stable and recyclable carbon coated cobalt (Co/C) nanoparticles is reported. Comparing non-functionalised Co/C nanomagnets with particles that were functionalised with amino moieties, the latter one proved to be more effective for scavenging mercury with respect to extraction capacity and recyclability. A novel nanoparticle-poly(ethyleneimine) hybrid (Co/C-PEI) prepared by direct ring opening polymerization of aziridine initiated by an amine functionalised nanoparticle surface led to a high capacity material (10 mmol amino groups per g nanomaterial) and thus proved to be the best material for scavenging toxic mercury at relevant concentrations (mg L -1 /μg L -1) for at least 6 consecutive cycles. On a large-scale, 20 L of drinking water with an initial Hg 2+ concentration of 30 μg L -1 can be decontaminated to the level acceptable for drinking water (≤2 μg L -1) with just 60 mg of Co/C-PEI particles.
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CITATION STYLE
Fernandes, S., Eichenseer, C. M., Kreitmeier, P., Rewitzer, J., Zlateski, V., Grass, R. N., … Reiser, O. (2015). Reversible magnetic mercury extraction from water. RSC Advances, 5(58), 46430–46436. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5ra04348d
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