Symmetry-reduction enhancement of nitrate removal on record-breaking layered yttrium hydroxide adsorbents†
Abstract
A new class of layered metal hydroxide materials, namely layered yttrium hydroxides (LYH-X, X− are anions such as Cl− and Br−), are reported to be excellent adsorbents to capture nitrate-nitrogen from neutral water. More importantly, the adsorption properties are correlated with the crystal symmetry of adsorbents: both the adsorption capacity and rate constant of LYH-Cl (orthorhombic P21212 space group) are almost twice of those of LYH-Br (monoclinic P21 space group). A comprehensive study combining multinuclear solid-state NMR spectroscopy and other multiscale characterization techniques was then performed to understand the origin of the symmetry-related adsorption behaviors. The results reveal an increasing trend of change in local environments of Y(OH)7·H2O, Y(OH)8·H2O, and Y(OH)8, implying that the adsorbed nitrate anions are located within the pocket constructed by alternating Y(OH)8·H2O and Y(OH)8. The splitting of the 89Y NMR peak of Y(OH)8·H2O of LYH-Cl after adsorption is consistent with the reduction of crystal symmetry from P21212 to its translationengleiche subgroup P2, providing an additional driving force for nitrate capture. This work thus not only discovers a nitrate adsorbent with a superior capacity of 44.56 ± 0.17 mg g−1, but also demonstrates a new concept of symmetry-driven adsorption enhancement.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Celebrating the 10th anniversary of Materials Science and Engineering at Nankai University