Resource shortage and industrial
wastewater pollution are important
problems concerning environmental safety. Copper is not only an important
industrial metal but also a common heavy metal contamination in water.
Selective extraction of copper from wastewater is a huge challenge.
Here, an environmentally friendly hybrid capacitive deionization method
was used to selectively remove Cu2+ from wastewater by
using the redox-active CuS electrode for the first time. CuS as a
cathode material can significantly reduce the concentration of Cu2+ in wastewater with the high adsorption capacity (350.04
mg·g–1) and excellent selective adsorption.
The removal efficiency for Cu2+ is greater than 90%, and
the distribution coefficient K
d is over
104 mL·g–1 in a variety of salt
ions and heavy metal-ion mixtures. Additionally, the electrode shows
high cyclic stability in the adsorption of Cu2+. Importantly,
CuS exhibits an outstanding copper extraction performance in real
water samples (e.g., industrial wastewater and natural
lake water), which confirms the high applicability of CuS in real-world
scenarios. Ex situ XRD and XPS tests were used to
unveil the Cu2+ removal mechanism. This work provides a
new direction for the removal of copper from wastewater and a possibility
for the application of copper resource extraction from wastewater.
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