Cadmium (Cd) and tetracycline (TC) cause serious environmental risks. Nanomaterials have been extensively applied for environmental remediation. The size and content of nanoparticles directly affect the removal of contaminants. However,… Click to show full abstract
Cadmium (Cd) and tetracycline (TC) cause serious environmental risks. Nanomaterials have been extensively applied for environmental remediation. The size and content of nanoparticles directly affect the removal of contaminants. However, size regulation and quantitative determination of nanoparticles cannot be easily realized. In this study, hydrogels with different polymerization degrees were prepared by adjusting the contents of acrylamide (AM) and sodium lignosulfonate polymeric monomers. Ferrous sulfide (FeS) nanoparticles of different sizes were synthesized in situ within the hydrogels. The nanoparticle size decreased from 600 to 200 nm with increasing hydrogel polymerization degree, and an incomplete crystalline state was observed at the highest polymerization degree. By combining energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) images with the maximum between-class variance (Otsu) method, the content of nanoparticles was calculated to be 7.81%, 15.05%, 22.62%, 27.10%, 21.97%, and 23.95%. The distribution state of FeS compounds was also obtained. A low polymerization degree resulted in high FeS dispersal, and a high polymerization degree affected the uniformity distribution based on irregular ion diffusion. The obtained nanocomposites with different polymerization degrees were applied to the removal of Cd and TC in water. The removal capacity for both contaminants revealed a trend of initially increasing and then decreasing. The initial increase was related to the increasing content and decreasing size of the FeS nanoparticles, while the following decrease was due to the decreasing content and incomplete crystallization of the FeS nanoparticles. Overall, changing the proportion of polymeric monomers is an effective way to regulate particle size, and the Otsu method combined with EDS mapping images is a feasible method for calculating the content of nanoparticles.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.