Self-Constructing 100% Water-Resistant Metal Sulfides through In Situ Acid Etching for Effective Elemental Mercury (Hg0) Capture.
Langmuir
; 39(49): 17993-18002, 2023 Dec 12.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38017358
Metal sulfides (MSs) can efficiently entrap thiophilic components, such as elemental mercury (Hg0), and realize environmental remediation. However, there is still a critical problem challenging the extensive application of MSs in related areas, i.e., how to self-regulate their water (H2O) resistance without complexing the sorbent preparation procedure. This work for the first time developed an in situ acid-etching method that self-engineered the water affinity of MSs through changing the interfacial interaction between MSs and Hg0/H2O. The introduction of abundant, undercoordinated sulfur onto the sorbent surface was the primary reason accounting for the significantly improved H2O resistance. The high surface coverage of undercoordinated sulfur induced the formation of polysulfur chains (Sx2-) that stabilized Hg0 via a bridging bond and repelled H2O, attributed to the favorable electron configurations. These properties made the surface of MSs highly hydrophobic and increased the adsorption selectivity toward Hg0 over H2O. The MSs exhibited 100% H2O resistance even in the presence of 20% H2O, which is much higher than the H2O concentration under most practical scenarios. From these perspectives, this work for the first time overcame the detrimental effects of H2O on MSs through a self-regulating way that is scalable and negligibly complexes the sorbent preparation pathway. The highly water-resistant and cost-effective MSs as prepared can serve as efficient Hg0 removal from industrial flue gas in the future.
Texto completo:
1
Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Langmuir
Asunto de la revista:
QUIMICA
Año:
2023
Tipo del documento:
Article
País de afiliación:
China