The selective adsorption by suitable substrate materials is considered one of the most economical methods. In this work, an all-inorganic bimetallic Mo-Fe-S cluster is facilely achieved through in situ chemical… Click to show full abstract
The selective adsorption by suitable substrate materials is considered one of the most economical methods. In this work, an all-inorganic bimetallic Mo-Fe-S cluster is facilely achieved through in situ chemical fixation of tetrathiomolybdate (TTM) on Fe3O4 nanoparticles (NPs) at room temperature (donated as FeMoS NPs). The bimetallic building blocks on the obtained FeMoS NPs possess a monovacancy species of sulfur, endowing FeMoS NPs with a selectivity order of Zn2+, Mn2+, Ni2+ < Cd2+ ≪ Cu2+ < Pb2+ for metal-ion adsorption, a novel application for the Mo-Fe-S clusters. Particularly, with the highest selectivity for Pb2+ (Kd ≈ 107), which is about 3 × 103-1 × 106 times higher than those for other ions and has exceeded that of a series of outstanding sorbents reported for Pb2+, FeMoS NPs can efficiently reduce the concentration of Pb2+ from ∼10 ppm to an extremely low level of ∼1 ppb. This facile and rational fabrication of the Mo-Fe-S cluster with Fe3O4 represents a feasible approach to cheaply develop novel and efficient materials for the selective removal of lead(II).
               
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