| Literature DB >> 27534975 |
Bingquan Peng1, Liang Chen1,2,3, Chenjing Que1, Ke Yang1, Fei Deng1, Xiaoyong Deng1, Guosheng Shi2, Gang Xu1, Minghong Wu4.
Abstract
The use of carbon based materials on the removal of antibiotics with high concentrations has been well studied, however the effect of this removal method is not clear on the actual concentration of environments, such as the hospital wastewater, sewage treatment plants and aquaculture wastewater. In this study, experimental studies on the adsorption of 7 antibiotics in environmental concentration of aqueous solutions by carbon based materials have been observed. Three kinds of carbon materials have shown very fast adsorption to antibiotics by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS-MS) detection, and the highest removal efficiency of antibiotics could reach to 100% within the range of detection limit. Surprisedly, the adsorption rate of graphene with small specific surface area was stronger than other two biochar, and adsorption rate of the two biochar which have approximate specific surface and different carbonization degree, was significantly different. The key point to the present observation were the π-π interactions between aromatic rings on adsorbed substance and carbon based materials by confocal laser scanning microscope observation. Moreover, adsorption energy markedly increased with increasing number of the π rings by using the density functional theory (DFT), showing the particular importance of π-π interactions in the adsorption process.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27534975 PMCID: PMC4989150 DOI: 10.1038/srep31920
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Characterization of B1, B2, and GN.
(A–C) SEM images; (D) FTIR; (E) Raman shift; (F) surface area of B1, B2, GN.
Figure 2The change of the concentration of antibiotics in solution with time for 3 adsorbents.
grapheme (GN); bamboo biochar (B2); coconut shell biochar (B1).
Figure 3Adsorption kinetics equations of first order.
(A) k1 (1/h) rate constant of the first-order kinetic model; (B) qe (ug/g) is the mass of antibiotics adsorbed on per unit mass of adsorbent at equilibrium time.
Figure 4Fluorescence image of graphene adsorption of FITC at 0, 10, 30, 60 (min).
Figure 5Adsorption energy of the different π rings on graphene flake surface.
Figure 6Chemical structure of antibiotics.