“…Note that the initial As ion concentrations are normally very low in practical applications; hence the capacity to remove As ions at low concentrations is a better criterion for selecting a suitable metal oxide adsorbent [18][19][20]. Moreover, the development of nanomaterials [9], especially those with heterogeneous structures, such as porous materials [21][22][23][24], spheres [25][26][27][28][29][30][31], hierarchical materials [32][33][34][35][36], nanocomposites [37,38], nanoparticles [39,40], nanosheets [41][42][43][44], nanojunctions [45], nanowires [46,47], nanoflowers [48], and binary metal oxides [49,50], is expected to play a key role for the diversified applications, including the detection and remediation of water pollution. The design and application of novel nanostructured metal oxides has received more and more attention in the purification of arsenic contaminated water in the past few decades.…”