| Literature DB >> 33866103 |
Daniel N Mengesha1, Richard Appiah-Ntiamoah2, Hern Kim3.
Abstract
The removal of methyl blue (MB) from wastewater using graphene and its derivative is very successful due to their high aromaticity which drives adsorption via π-π and electron-donor-acceptor (EDA) interactions; however, graphene is expensive and difficult to synthesize, which limit its practical application. Meanwhile, low aromatic carbon materials (LACM) derived from farm-water and other materials are cheaper and easier to synthesize but have limited π-π and EDA interactions and low adsorption capacity. Herein, we demonstrate that LACM with oxidized-nitrogen (N-O-) functionality overcomes this limitation via chemisorption of MB through a combination of hydrophobic-hydrophobic interactions and EDA interactions. This is confirmed using XPS analysis of LACM/N-O- post MB adsorption. Consequently, a remarkable adsorption capacity of 3904 mg g-1 is achieved under batch condition which is the highest ever reported for any MB adsorbent. Furthermore, LACM/N-O- works equally well under continuous-flow adsorption conditions which shows its practicability. Amongst several LACM precursors tested, only Azo-dyes are able to generate LACM/N-O- implying that the NN moiety is key to N-O- formation. A carbonization temperature of 700 °C generates the highest N-O- sites hence the highest adsorption capacity. Characterization of LACM/N-O- is done mainly using BET, XPS, Raman, TGA, and FTIR analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Adsorbent; Azo dyes; Carbon sheet; Methyl blue; Oxidized nitrogen
Year: 2021 PMID: 33866103 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.130463
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086