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Mechanistic insights of hexavalent chromium remediation by halloysite-supported copper nanoclusters

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-10, 17:52 authored by Amal Kanti Deb, Bhabananda BiswasBhabananda Biswas, Ravendra NaiduRavendra Naidu, Mohammad RahmanMohammad Rahman
Chromium (Cr) pollution is a significant environmental concern with remediation challenge. Hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) is more toxic than trivalent chromium (Cr(III)) due to its mutagenicity and oncogenicity. In this investigation, a multi-functional material, copper nanoclusters (CuNCs)-halloysite nanotubes (HNT) composite (CuNCs@HNT), has been synthesised in an eco-friendly manner and utilised for Cr(VI) remediation. Advanced analytical tools confirmed the seeding of ultra-fine CuNCs onto HNT surfaces. The maximum adsorption capacity of CuNCs@HNT is 79.14 + 6.99 mg/g at pH 5 + 0.1 with an increment at lower pHs. This performance was comparable for real surface stream water as well as other reported materials. The pseudo-second-order kinetic-, intra-particle diffusion- and Freundlich isotherm models well fit the experimental data implying that the chemisorption, multiphase diffusion and multi-molecular layer distribution occurred during adsorption. The Fourier-transform infrared and the x-ray photoelectron spectra also ensured the transformation of Cr(VI) to Cr(III) indicating the material's suitability for concurrent adsorption and reduction of Cr(VI). While coexisting cations and anions did not overwhelm this adsorption, CuNCs@HNT was regenerated and reused five successive times in adsorption-desorption cycles without significant loss of adsorption capacity and material's integrity. Therefore, this multi-functional, biocompatible, low-cost and stable CuNCs@HNT composite may have practical application for similar toxic metals remediation.

History

Journal title

Journal of Hazardous Materials

Volume

421

Issue

5 January 2022

Article number

126812

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Engineering, Science and Environment

School

Global Centre for Environmental Remediation (GCER)