Issue 21, 2014

Effective recovery of acids from iron-based electrolytes using graphene oxide membrane filters

Abstract

The efficient recovery of acids from iron-based electrolytes using graphene oxide (GO) membranes was demonstrated for the first time. The results revealed that the amount of H+ permeating the GO membranes and reaching drains was two orders of magnitude larger than that of Fe3+. Notably, when the FeCl3 source concentration was reduced to certain extent, Fe3+ could be completely blocked by GO membranes. The mechanism for the effective separation of H+ from Fe3+ was studied, suggesting that the molecular sieving effect of GO nanocapillaries and the coordination between Fe3+ and GO were responsible for the effective blockage of Fe3+ while the rapid propagation of H+ through hydrogen-bonding networks along water layers within the interlayer spacing was responsible for the fast migration of H+. These properties made GO membranes promising cation-exchange membranes for applications of wastewater reuse and membrane separation.

Graphical abstract: Effective recovery of acids from iron-based electrolytes using graphene oxide membrane filters

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
08 Feb 2014
Accepted
31 Mar 2014
First published
31 Mar 2014

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2014,2, 7734-7737

Author version available

Effective recovery of acids from iron-based electrolytes using graphene oxide membrane filters

P. Sun, K. Wang, J. Wei, M. Zhong, D. Wu and H. Zhu, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2014, 2, 7734 DOI: 10.1039/C4TA00668B

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