Multilayer
Dye Adsorption in Activated CarbonsFacile
Approach to Exploit Vacant Sites and Interlayer Charge Interaction
Version 2 2016-05-11, 15:00Version 2 2016-05-11, 15:00
Version 1 2016-04-26, 18:53Version 1 2016-04-26, 18:53
Posted on 2016-04-18 - 00:00
Altering the textural
properties of activated carbons (ACs) via
physicochemical techniques to increase their specific surface area
and/or to manipulate their pore size is a common practice to enhance
their adsorption capacity. Instead, this study proposes the utilization
of the vacant sites remaining unoccupied after dye uptake saturation
by removing the steric hindrance and same-charge repulsion phenomena
via multilayer adsorption. Herein, it has been shown that the adsorption
capacity of the fresh AC is a direct function of the dye molecular
size. As the cross-sectional area of the dye molecule increases, the
steric hindrance effect exerted on the neighboring adsorbed molecules
increases, and the geometrical packing efficiency is constrained.
Thus, ACs saturated with larger dye molecules render higher concentrations
of vacant adsorption sites which can accommodate an additional layer
of dye molecules on the exhausted adsorbent through interlayer attractive
forces. The second layer adsorption capacity (60–200 mg·g–1) has been demonstrated to have a linear relationship
with the uncovered surface area of the exhausted AC, which is, in
turn, inversely proportional to the adsorbate molecular size. Unlike
the second layer adsorption, the third layer adsorption is a direct
function of the charge density of the second layer.
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Hadi, Pejman; Guo, Jiaxin; Barford, John; McKay, Gordon (2016). Multilayer
Dye Adsorption in Activated CarbonsFacile
Approach to Exploit Vacant Sites and Interlayer Charge Interaction. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.6b00021