A facile, feasible, and green synthesis via an electrochemical exfoliation process was applied to synthesize nitrogen-doped MgO/graphene nanocomposite (N-MgO/G). The N-MgO/G nanocomposite was characterized by several analytical techniques including X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, X-ray powder diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, field emission scanning electron microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, selected area electron diffraction, and elemental mapping analysis. N-MgO/G nanocomposite was then applied to adsorb lead metal ions (Pb2+) from aqueous solutions. The N-MgO/G nanocomposite demonstrated a remarkably high Langmuir maximum adsorption capacity (294.12 mg/g) for Pb2+ ions under the optimum experimental conditions at a pH of 5.13, time of 35 min, dose of 0.025 g, the concentration of 400 mg/L, and a temperature of 36 °C. Adsorption kinetics results fitted with a pseudo-second-order model and a thermodynamic study showed that Pb2+ adsorption is an endothermic process. The practical application of N-MgO/G was also investigated to test its applicability in real water samples collected from different sources such as deionized water, tap water, wastewater, and river water.
Keywords: Adsorption; Applicability; Characterization; Exfoliation process; Graphene; Synthesis.