Acta Chim. Sinica ›› 2017, Vol. 75 ›› Issue (10): 991-997.DOI: 10.6023/A17070345 Previous Articles     Next Articles

Article

应用纳米零价铁富集银的研究

顾天航a,b, 石君明a,b, 滑熠龙a,b, 刘静a,b, 王伟a,c, 张伟贤a,b   

  1. a 污染控制与资源化研究国家重点实验室 上海 200092;
    b 同济大学环境科学与工程学院 上海 200092;
    c 同济大学化学科学与工程学院 上海 200092
  • 投稿日期:2017-07-28 发布日期:2017-09-18
  • 通讯作者: 王伟,E-mail:06ww@tongji.edu.cn;张伟贤,E-mail:zhangwx@tongji.edu.cn E-mail:06ww@tongji.edu.cn;zhangwx@tongji.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:

    “博新计划”(BX201700172)和国家自然科学基金(No.51578398)资助.

Enrichment of Silver from Water Using Nanoscale Zero-Valent Iron (nZVI)

Gu Tianhanga,b, Shi Junminga,b, Hua Yilonga,b, Liu Jinga,b, Wang Weia,c, Zhang Wei-xiana,b   

  1. a State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, Shanghai 200092;
    b College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092;
    c School of Chemical Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092
  • Received:2017-07-28 Published:2017-09-18
  • Supported by:

    Project supported by the National Postdoctoral Program for Innovative Talents (BX201700172) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 51578398).

Increasing evidence suggests that nanoscale zero-valent iron (nZVI) is an effective nanomaterial for the enrichment and separation of heavy metals from water, especially for recovering precious metals such as gold and silver from trace level sources. In this work, a nano-iron reactor, consisting of reaction zone, separation zone and reuse facilities, is applied to recovery of silver from aqueous solution using nZVI. We demonstrate that nZVI could sequester Ag+ (ca. 1 mg/L) and be transformed into high-grade (32.0 mg/g) silver solids ("ore") as nZVI is recycled in this "reaction-separation-reuse" system. Besides, increasing hydraulic retention time (HRT), from 10 min to 60 min, could enhance the enrichment efficiency and finally improve silver content in solid phase. We further demonstrate that there is a positive correlation between solution oxidation-reduction potential in reaction zone and Ag+ concentration in effluent, and this relationship can be used to regulate the reaction kinetics and separation efficiency. Data from oxidation-reduction potential regulating experiment are presented and a mathematic formula is provided, proving this system is reliable and controllable. Solid phase characterizations with X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy confirm that Ag+ is reduced to metallic silver (Ag0). Images acquired via high-resolution transmission electron microscopy reveal that Ag0 (<10 nm) is deposited on the surface of nZVI (Ag-nZVI). Pure silver nanoparticles (AgNPs, 9~32 nm) could be acquired by simply processing Ag-nZVI with sulfuric acid and polyvinyl pyrrolidone. Batch experiments confirm that nZVI is far more efficient and less pH-dependent, comparing to other materials (e.g., mZVI, α-Fe2O3, nTiO2). 99% Ag+ (1000 mg/L) could be sequestrated in less than 15 s with 1 g/L nZVI. And the separation coefficient of nZVI for Ag+ reaches 3.2×104, which is several orders of magnitude higher than that of conventional adsorbents and reductants (102~741). This study demonstrates that nZVI is a powerful candidate to recover Ag from water (e.g., industrial wastewater, groundwater) with trace level silver and produce valuable AgNPs.

Key words: nanoscale zero-valent iron, silver, enrichment, silver nanoparticles, nano-iron reactor