Issue 14, 2018, Issue in Progress

A cellulose acetate/Amygdalus pedunculata shell-derived activated carbon composite monolith for phenol adsorption

Abstract

Amygdalus pedunculata is expected to be a good candidate plant for desert reclamation (“greening”) since it has notable tolerance to cold and drought and can grow in a wide range of areas with different soil types and moisture contents. In this study, we have developed a single-step method to fabricate a cellulose acetate (CA)/A. pedunculata shell (APS)-derived activated carbon (AC) composite monolith by thermally induced phase separation (TIPS) for removal of toxic phenol from aqueous solution. The composite monolith was easily fabricated by TIPS of a CA solution in the presence of the dispersed AC, in which AC was well loaded onto the monolithic skeleton of CA. The as-obtained monolith showed a maximum adsorption capacity of 45 mg g−1 at the initial phenol concentration of 0.8 mg mL−1. The present composite can be prepared with an arbitrary shape by a facile method from cheap materials, and is more convenient to recycle than powder adsorbents. Therefore, the present CA/APS-derived AC composite monolith has great potential as a promising adsorbent of low cost with convenient separation for toxic phenol-containing wastewater.

Graphical abstract: A cellulose acetate/Amygdalus pedunculata shell-derived activated carbon composite monolith for phenol adsorption

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Dec 2017
Accepted
12 Feb 2018
First published
16 Feb 2018
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2018,8, 7599-7605

A cellulose acetate/Amygdalus pedunculata shell-derived activated carbon composite monolith for phenol adsorption

Q. Xiong, Q. Bai, C. Li, Y. He, Y. Shen and H. Uyama, RSC Adv., 2018, 8, 7599 DOI: 10.1039/C7RA13017A

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