| Literature DB >> 35541110 |
Chun Sing Kam1, Tik Lun Leung1, Fangzhou Liu1, Aleksandra B Djurišić1, Mao Hai Xie1, Wai-Kin Chan2, Ying Zhou3, Kaimin Shih3.
Abstract
We have investigated lead adsorption on different forms of nanostructured carbon, namely multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) and reduced graphene oxide (RGO) functionalized with different functional groups (hydroxyl, carboxyl, and amino groups). We found that the same functional group does not result in the same performance trends for different nanostructured carbons. Drastically different behavior was observed for the amino-group functionalization, where a significant improvement is observed for MWCNT, while worse performance compared to non-functionalized material is obtained for RGO. On the other hand, hydroxyl and carboxyl group functionalization improves the lead adsorption regardless of the form of carbon. The best performing RGO sample, namely carboxyl group functionalized one, exhibited maximum lead adsorption capacity of 298.49 mg g-1 which was significantly higher than that of the best performing MWCNT sample (amino-functionalized MWCNT, 58.547 mg g-1). This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35541110 PMCID: PMC9080567 DOI: 10.1039/c8ra02264j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Isotherm fitting results for MWCNT samples. Correlation coefficient r2 values are given for comparison of goodness of fit
| Model | MWCNT | OHCNT 1.8% | OHCNT 5.5% | NHCNT | COOH CNT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Langmuir (linear) |
| 0.795 | 0.972 | 0.982 | 0.941 | 0.759 |
|
| 10.167 | 12.099 | 57.904 | 58.547 | 34.545 | |
|
| 0.009 | 0.025 | 0.027 | 0.020 | 0.008 | |
| Freundlich |
| 0.775 | 0.972 | 0.968 | 0.929 | 0.811 |
|
| 2.218 | 2.844 | 3.046 | 2.936 | 2.08 | |
|
| 0.555 | 1.543 | 7.604 | 6.726 | 1.51 | |
Isotherm fitting results for RGO and GO samples. Correlation coefficient r2 values are given for comparison of goodness of fit
| Model | RGO | OH-RGO | NH-RGO | COOH-RGO | GO-HM | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Langmuir (linear) |
| 0.972 | 0.993 | 0.996 | 0.995 | 0.989 |
|
| 36.496 | 123.76 | 16.667 | 298.49 | 118.42 | |
|
| 0.021 | 0.062 | 0.085 | 0.330 | 0.06 | |
| Freundlich |
| 0.965 | 0.746 | 0.852 | 0.811 | 0.977 |
|
| 3.013 | 9.601 | 4.925 | 7.337 | 3.466 | |
|
| 4.482 | 61.401 | 5.110 | 138.81 | 21.698 | |
Kinetic fitting results for different MWCNT samples. Correlation coefficient r2 values are given for comparison of goodness of fit
| Parameter | MWCNT | OHCNT 1.8% | OHCNT 5.5% | NHCNT | COOH CNT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.9975 | 0.9974 | 0.9975 | 0.9993 | 0.9979 |
|
| 4.2050 | 4.6402 | 22.8102 | 19.8728 | 7.3981 |
|
| 5.8971 | 1.5476 | 0.1996 | 0.0797 | 7.0004 |
Kinetic fitting results for RGO and GO samples. Correlation coefficient r2 values are given for comparison of goodness of fit
| Parameter | RGO | OH-RGO | NH-RGO | COOH-RGO | GO-HM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.9743 | 1 | 0.9945 | 1 | 0.9934 |
|
| 11.8319 | 49.2126 | 6.9667 | 49.7512 | 37.3134 |
|
| 0.2585 | 0.688171 | 0.152124 | 0.17956 | 0.0325 |
In-line filtration results for different samples. Flow rate is also given
| Sorbent | Flow rate (mL min−1) | % Removal |
|---|---|---|
| MWCNT | 3 | 14.32 ± 7.48 |
| OH-CNT 1.8% | 3 | 12.66 ± 4.96 |
| OH-CNT 5.5% | 3.3 | 32.90 ± 1.69 |
| NH-CNT | 3.3 | 28.03 ± 4.18 |
| COOH-CNT | 4 | 25.43 ± 2.79 |
| RGO | 6 | 24.97 ± 5.86 |
| OH-RGO | 2 | 76.16 ± 3.61 |
| NH-RGO | 2 | 13.79 ± 2.73 |
| COOH-RGO | 4 | 77.31 ± 0.65 |
Fig. 1FTIR spectra of MWCNT samples with different functionalizations before and after lead adsorption.
Fig. 2FTIR spectra of RGO/GO samples with different functionalizations before and after lead adsorption.
Fig. 3XPS spectra of C 1s and O 1s peaks of COOHCNT samples before and after lead adsorption.
Fig. 4XPS spectra of C 1s and O 1s peaks of COOH-RGO samples before and after lead adsorption.