Wang, Huabin, Liu, Yong, Ifthikar, Jerosha, Shi, Lerong, Khan, Aimal, Chen, Zhulei, and Chen, Zhuqi
Pyrolysis under protective atmosphere was regarded as an indispensable process for the preparation of biomass-based adsorbents to achieve higher surface areas. In this paper, magnetic carbon composites (MCC) that fabricated under air atmosphere showed an adsorption capacity of 167.22 mg/g in 200 ppm Hg(II), which was significantly higher than magnetic biochar (MBC, 31.80 mg/g) that fabricated under traditional nitrogen protection, and this remarkable performance of MCC was consistent in a wide range of pHs. Based on BET, XRD, FTIR, SEM and Boehm titration, MCC was demonstrated with limited surface area (43.29 m 2 /g) but large amount of surface functional groups comparing with MBC. Additionally, γ-Fe 2 O 3 with a high degree of crystallization was generated in MCC, which led to a better magnetic property and recyclability. Moreover, characterizations, Langmuir isotherm and pseudo-second-order kinetics demonstrated the chemisorption was dominant for MCC in mercury capture, and surface complexation co-precipitate of Hg 4 Fe 8 O 16 C 56 H 40 were also formed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]