## Abstract Activated carbons play an important role in the purification of air and of water. Whereas vapors are adsorbed by a micropore filling process, the removal of sparingly soluble species such as phenol and its derivatives is limited to the coating of the effective surface of the material. T
Comparative Study of the Adsorption from Aqueous Solutions and the Desorption of Phenol and Nonylphenol Substrates on Activated Carbons
โ Scribed by D.M. Nevskaia; A. Guerrero-Ruiz
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 117 KB
- Volume
- 234
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
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โฆ Synopsis
Adsorption of phenol and nonylphenol from aqueous solutions on microporous activated carbons has been studied. The phenol isotherm changes from L-shaped for surface oxygen group free carbon (I sample) to a two-stepped isotherm for oxidized carbon (IN sample, HNO(3) treated) Furthermore, the adsorbed amounts diminish in about 25% on IN carbon. It is proposed that a change in the adsorption mechanism take place; i.e., weak interaction forces between the pi electrons in phenol and the pi electron in carbon are present on the original I carbon, while a donor-acceptor complex on the oxidized IN carbon is operating between basic surface oxygen groups and phenol aromatic rings. The shape of nonylphenol isotherms is two-stepped for both carbons. The introduction of acidic oxygen surface groups on the carbon enhances the specific nonylphenol adsorption by about 40%. This may be interpreted as being due to the fact that nonylphenol is hydrogen-bonded to the oxidized carbon surface by means of acidic groups. Thermal desorption experiments indicate that phenol is mainly physisorbed. Thermal desorption further confirms that nonylphenol is possibly bonded to oxygen surface groups by hydrogen bonds. Copyright 2001 Academic Press.
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