Issue 23, 2021

Surface basicity mediated rapid and selective adsorptive removal of Congo red over nanocrystalline mesoporous CeO2

Abstract

Herein we first report surface basicity mediated rapid and selective adsorptive removal of organic pollutants over nanocrystalline mesoporous CeO2. The role of surface features in controlling the selectivity and efficiency of adsorption is well known. Nevertheless, the possibility of tuning the adsorption capacity and selectivity of adsorbents through their surface characteristics remains less explored. In this work, the surface basicity of mesoporous CeO2 nanoparticles was improved by Er3+ doping under two different reaction conditions: via sol–gel and sol–hydrothermal methods. The nature and amount of surface basic sites were determined with the help of CO2 temperature programmed desorption (TPD). The adsorption capacity and selectivity of four different CeO2 samples were investigated using Congo red, methyl orange, and methylene blue as the model pollutants. From the adsorption studies, Er3+ doped CeO2 synthesized by the sol–gel method, having the highest amount of surface basic sites, proved to be the most efficient and highly selective adsorbent among the four developed variants of CeO2 towards Congo red. According to the proposed mechanism, surface basicity can be employed as a controlling parameter capable of tuning the adsorption capacity as well as the selectivity of CeO2 towards organic pollutants.

Graphical abstract: Surface basicity mediated rapid and selective adsorptive removal of Congo red over nanocrystalline mesoporous CeO2

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Jun 2021
Accepted
18 Sep 2021
First published
21 Sep 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale Adv., 2021,3, 6704-6718

Surface basicity mediated rapid and selective adsorptive removal of Congo red over nanocrystalline mesoporous CeO2

D. Joshy, S. Chakko, Y. A. Ismail and P. Periyat, Nanoscale Adv., 2021, 3, 6704 DOI: 10.1039/D1NA00412C

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