Biological upcycling of nickel and sulfate as electrocatalyst from electroplating wastewater

WATER RESEARCH(2024)

Cited 0|Views6
No score
Abstract
Upcycling nickel (Ni) to useful catalyst is an appealing route to realize low-carbon treatment of electroplating wastewater and simultaneously recovering Ni resource, but has been restricted by the needs for costly mem-branes or consumption of large amount of chemicals in the existing upcycling processes. Herein, a biological upcycling route for synchronous recovery of Ni and sulfate as electrocatalysts, with certain amount of ferric salt (Fe3+) added to tune the product composition, is proposed. Efficient biosynthesis of bio-NiFeS nanoparticles from electroplating wastewater was achieved by harnessing the sulfate reduction and metal detoxification ability of Desulfovibrio vulgaris. The optimal bio-NiFeS, after further annealing at 300 degrees C, served as an efficient oxygen evolution electrocatalyst, achieving a current density of 10 mA & sdot;cm 1 at an overpotential of 247 mV and a Tafel slope of 60.2 mV & sdot;dec 1. It exhibited comparable electrocatalytic activity with the chemically-synthesized counterparts and outperformed the commercial RuO2. The feasibility of the biological upcycling approach for treating real Ni-containing electroplating wastewater was also demonstrated, achieving 99.5 % Ni2+removal and 41.0 % SO42 removal and enabling low-cost fabrication of electrocatalyst. Our work paves a new path for sus-tainable treatment of Ni-containing wastewater and may inspire technology innovations in recycling/ removal of various metal ions.
More
Translated text
Key words
Electroplating wastewater,Biogenic nanomaterials,Electrocatalyst,Upcycling,Nickel,Sulfate reduction
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined