Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7782994 | Carbohydrate Polymers | 2018 | 27 Pages |
Abstract
Inspired by the phenomenon of sponges soaking up water, a novel syringe-like adsorption device used diglycolamic-acid modified chitosan sponges (CSs-DGAA) as adsorbents is reported for recycling of rare-earth elements (REEs) by Squeezing & Soaking (S&S) operation. Integrating the elasticity of sponges and selective extraction ability of diglycolamic acid groups, the new device can efficiently recycle REEs from aqueous solutions. This device only needs 10â¯min to achieve adsorption equilibrium; squeezing the water from the sponges achieves solid-liquid separation. This syringe-like adsorption method not only solves the pollution problem caused by the organic solvents used during liquidliquid extractions, but also improves the time needed to achieve adsorption equilibrium and uses significantly less energy than energy intensive solid-phase extractions of solid-liquid separations. Moreover, the environment-friendly adsorbents effectively recycle yttrium and europium from waste phosphor powders. These experimental results demonstrated that the S&S method based on polymeric sponges has potential application in hydrometallurgy and environmental remediation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
Authors
Ruixi Bai, Fan Yang, Yang Zhang, Zhigang Zhao, Qiuxia Liao, Peng Chen, Panpan Zhao, Wanghuan Guo, Chunqing Cai,