Phenol adsorption and desorption with physically and chemically tailored porous polymers: Mechanistic variability associated with hyper-cross-linking and amination.

Adsorbent regeneration Amine functionalization Hyper-cross-linking Phenol adsorption Porous polymers

Journal

Journal of hazardous materials
ISSN: 1873-3336
Titre abrégé: J Hazard Mater
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 9422688

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
05 01 2019
Historique:
received: 05 04 2018
revised: 19 08 2018
accepted: 20 08 2018
pubmed: 5 9 2018
medline: 5 9 2018
entrez: 5 9 2018
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Understanding phenol adsorption-desorption mechanisms allows adsorbent tailoring to improve capacity and adsorbent reuse. Amberlite™ XAD4, a commercial styrenic polymer that is convenient to physically and chemically modify, was functionalized with dimethylamine (DMA) or trimethylamine (TMA) and/or hyper-cross-linked with 1,2-dichloroethane. These modifications were applied to enhance individual and/or synergistic phenol adsorption mechanisms, including hydrogen bonding, electrostatic interactions, and π-π dispersion forces. While XAD4-DMA adsorbs more phenol at pH = 6, XAD4-TMA has 23% higher capacity at pH = 11 due to adsorbate deprotonation that increases electrostatic interactions. Combining hyper-cross-linking with amination maximizes adsorption capacity due to synergistic impacts associated with increased micropore volume and surface affinity. Amine groups reduce desorption efficiency by 6-94% due to stronger adsorbate-adsorbent interactions compared to π-π dispersion forces. Isobutanol, which forms hydrogen bonds, is the most efficient desorption solvent, followed by chloroform, which has the same polarity index but does not hydrogen bond. n-Hexane only desorbs phenol removed with π-π dispersion forces and is not appropriate to regenerate aminated polymers. 0.1 N NaOH is an environmentally benign solvent for regenerating as-received XAD4 and XAD4-DMA, but not XAD4-TMA. Understanding phenol adsorption mechanisms allows development of physiochemically modified polymers with increased phenol adsorption capacity and regeneration efficiency.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30179787
pii: S0304-3894(18)30756-8
doi: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2018.08.068
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

162-168

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Mohsen Ghafari (M)

Department of Civil, Structural, and Environmental Engineering, State University of New York - University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, 14260, United States.

Yanbin Cui (Y)

Department of Civil, Structural, and Environmental Engineering, State University of New York - University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, 14260, United States.

Abdulrhman Alali (A)

Department of Civil, Structural, and Environmental Engineering, State University of New York - University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, 14260, United States.

John D Atkinson (JD)

Department of Civil, Structural, and Environmental Engineering, State University of New York - University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, 14260, United States. Electronic address: AtkJDW@buffalo.edu.

Classifications MeSH