scholarly journals A Study of the Sorption Characteristics of Nanostructured Calcium Silicate

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Mathew James Cairns

<p>Nanostructured calcium silicate (NCS) is an X-ray amorphous silicate material consisting of randomly arranged platelets several tens of nanometres in size, forming agglomerates a few micrometres in size. This affords the material a high, readily accessible surface area of up to 600 m2 g -1 with chemically active surface-bound calcium and silanol groups being integral parts of the silicate structure. As such, it makes an ideal material for the sorption of many potential pollutant materials. However, NCS is highly thixotropic. This reduces its applicability for use as a sorbent material on a large scale, the thixotropic nature of NCS precluding its efficient separation from suspension. NCS, in contact with water, will ion-exchange surface-bound calcium with hydrogen ions, releasing calcium into solution, and leading to an increase in the pH value of the solution. The process may be exploited by using the material as a sorbent for cationic metal species forming insoluble hydroxides. This thesis demonstrates the use of NCS as a sorbent material for Cu2+, with the material exhibiting a sorption capacity for this ion of up to 10 mmol g -1. When the sorption capacity of the material is reached, all the calcium initially present in the NCS material (31-38 wt % CaO) is leached into solution. The copper is initially sorbed as an X-ray amorphous phase (most likely Cu(OH)2) but in the presence of excess copper, the more thermodynamically stable crystalline phase Cu2X(OH)3, X being chloride or nitrate, is formed. It was shown that the presence of calcium is necessary for this sorption to occur. When calcium was leached from the material prior to sorption studies, the sorption capacity of the material was significantly decreased. To aid the separation process of NCS from solution, bulk magnetite powder (Fe3O4), or superparamagnetic magnetite or maghemite (g-Fe2O3) were incorporated into the NCS structure during its synthesis. The addition of these additives to the NCS material reduced characteristics such as specific surface area or sorption capacity insofar as extra mass had been added to the system. The structure of the NCS was not degraded. The NCS material containing bulk magnetite powder was shown to be applicable to the sorption of phosphate in a continuous fluidised bed system, utilising the magnetic properties of the material to aid separation. Phosphate was chosen, as the sorption characteristics of NCS with respect to this ion were previously known. Attempts to use magnetic techniques to separate the superparamagnetic composites subsequent to copper sorption were unsuccessful. Although the composite materials exhibited similar sorption capacity for copper to the unmodified one, the acidic conditions of the copper solution degraded the composite, precluding the use of magnetic separation. Finally, composite materials of NCS and a conducting polymer, polyaniline, were prepared which provided potential redox-activity to a high surface area substrate. The sorption characteristics of this material were  demonstrated with its use as a sorbent for the perrhenate ion. This rhenium ion was chosen due to its chemical similarity to pertechnetate, a component of many radioactive wastewaters. It was demonstrated that the sorption process proceeded via an electrochemical mechanism in which the polyaniline caused the perrhenate ion to be reduced to a rhenium oxide species.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Mathew James Cairns

<p>Nanostructured calcium silicate (NCS) is an X-ray amorphous silicate material consisting of randomly arranged platelets several tens of nanometres in size, forming agglomerates a few micrometres in size. This affords the material a high, readily accessible surface area of up to 600 m2 g -1 with chemically active surface-bound calcium and silanol groups being integral parts of the silicate structure. As such, it makes an ideal material for the sorption of many potential pollutant materials. However, NCS is highly thixotropic. This reduces its applicability for use as a sorbent material on a large scale, the thixotropic nature of NCS precluding its efficient separation from suspension. NCS, in contact with water, will ion-exchange surface-bound calcium with hydrogen ions, releasing calcium into solution, and leading to an increase in the pH value of the solution. The process may be exploited by using the material as a sorbent for cationic metal species forming insoluble hydroxides. This thesis demonstrates the use of NCS as a sorbent material for Cu2+, with the material exhibiting a sorption capacity for this ion of up to 10 mmol g -1. When the sorption capacity of the material is reached, all the calcium initially present in the NCS material (31-38 wt % CaO) is leached into solution. The copper is initially sorbed as an X-ray amorphous phase (most likely Cu(OH)2) but in the presence of excess copper, the more thermodynamically stable crystalline phase Cu2X(OH)3, X being chloride or nitrate, is formed. It was shown that the presence of calcium is necessary for this sorption to occur. When calcium was leached from the material prior to sorption studies, the sorption capacity of the material was significantly decreased. To aid the separation process of NCS from solution, bulk magnetite powder (Fe3O4), or superparamagnetic magnetite or maghemite (g-Fe2O3) were incorporated into the NCS structure during its synthesis. The addition of these additives to the NCS material reduced characteristics such as specific surface area or sorption capacity insofar as extra mass had been added to the system. The structure of the NCS was not degraded. The NCS material containing bulk magnetite powder was shown to be applicable to the sorption of phosphate in a continuous fluidised bed system, utilising the magnetic properties of the material to aid separation. Phosphate was chosen, as the sorption characteristics of NCS with respect to this ion were previously known. Attempts to use magnetic techniques to separate the superparamagnetic composites subsequent to copper sorption were unsuccessful. Although the composite materials exhibited similar sorption capacity for copper to the unmodified one, the acidic conditions of the copper solution degraded the composite, precluding the use of magnetic separation. Finally, composite materials of NCS and a conducting polymer, polyaniline, were prepared which provided potential redox-activity to a high surface area substrate. The sorption characteristics of this material were  demonstrated with its use as a sorbent for the perrhenate ion. This rhenium ion was chosen due to its chemical similarity to pertechnetate, a component of many radioactive wastewaters. It was demonstrated that the sorption process proceeded via an electrochemical mechanism in which the polyaniline caused the perrhenate ion to be reduced to a rhenium oxide species.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (20) ◽  
pp. 7170
Author(s):  
Abbas Ibrahim Hussein ◽  
Zuryati Ab-Ghani ◽  
Ahmad Nazeer Che Mat ◽  
Nur Atikah Ab Ghani ◽  
Adam Husein ◽  
...  

Cockle shells are a natural reservoir of calcium carbonate (CaCO3), which is widely used in bone repair, tissue scaffolds, and the development of advanced drug delivery systems. Although many studies report on the preparation of CaCO3, the development of a nanosized spherical CaCO3 precursor for calcium oxide (CaO) that is suitable to be incorporated in dental material was scarce. Therefore, this study aimed to synthesize a nanosized spherical CaCO3 precursor for CaO derived from cockle shells using a sol–gel method. Cockle shells were crushed to powder form and mixed with hydrochloric acid, forming calcium chloride (CaCl2). Potassium carbonate (K2CO3) was then fed to the diluted CaCl2 to obtain CaCO3. The effect of experimental parameters on the morphology of CaCO3, such as volume of water, type of solvents, feeding rate of K2CO3, and drying method, were investigated using field-emission scanning electron microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray diffractometry (XRD), Brunauer–Emmett–Teller surface area analysis, and thermogravimetric analysis. Optimized CaCO3 was then calcined to form CaO. XRD analysis of CaCO3 nanoparticles was indicative of the formation of a calcite phase. The well-structured spherical shape of CaCO3 was obtained by the optimum condition of the addition of 50 mL of water into CaCl2 in ethanolic solution with a 1 h feeding rate of K2CO3. Less agglomeration of CaCO3 was obtained using a freeze-drying technique with the surface area of 26 m2/g and average particle size of 39 nm. Spherical shaped nanosized CaO (22–70 nm) was also synthesized. The reproducibility, low cost, and simplicity of the method suggest its potential applications in the large-scale synthesis of the nanoparticles, with spherical morphology in an industrial setting.


2000 ◽  
Vol 628 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.N. Blanton ◽  
D. Majumdar ◽  
S.M. Melpolder

ABSTRACTClay-polymer nanoparticulate composite materials are evaluated by the X-ray diffraction technique. The basal plane spacing provided information about the degree of intercalation and exfoliation of the 2: 1 layered clay structure. Both intercalation and exfoliation are controlled by the identity of the polymer and the clay:polymer ratio.


Author(s):  
A. Safonov ◽  
N. Andriushchenko ◽  
N. Popova ◽  
K. Boldyrev

Проведен анализ сорбционных характеристик природных материалов (вермикулит, керамзит, перлит, цеолит Трейд ) при очистке кадмий- и хромсодержащих сточных вод с высокой нагрузкой по ХПК. Установлено, что цеолит обладает максимальными сорбционными характеристиками для Cd и Cr и наименьшим биологическим обрастанием. При использовании вермикулита и керамзита или смесей на их основе можно ожидать увеличения сорбционной емкости для Cd и Сr при микробном обрастании, неизбежно происходящем в условиях контакта с водами, загрязненными органическими соединениями и биогенами. При этом биообрастание может повысить иммобилизационную способность материалов для редоксзависимых металлов за счет ферментативных ресурсов бактериальных клеток, использующих их в качестве акцепторов электронов. Эффект микробного обрастания разнонаправленно изменял параметры материалов: для Cr в большинстве случаев уменьшение и для Cd значительное увеличение. При этом дополнительным эффектом иммобилизации Cr является его биологическое восстановление биопленками. Варьируя состав сорбционного материала, можно подбирать смеси, оптимально подходящие для очистки вод инфильтратов с полигонов твердых бытовых отходов с высокой нагрузкой по ХПК и биогенным элементам как при использовании in situ, так и в системах на поверхности.The analysis of the sorption characteristics of natural materials (vermiculite, expanded clay, perlite, Trade zeolite) during the purification of cadmium and chromium-containing leachate with a high COD load was carried out. It was determined that zeolite had the maximum sorption capacity for Cd and Cr and the lowest biological fouling. When using vermiculite and expanded clay or mixtures on their basis, one can expect an increase in the sorption capacity for Cd and Cr during microbial fouling that inevitably occurs during contacting with water polluted with organic compounds and nutrients. In this case biofouling can increase the immobilization properties of materials for redox-dependent metals due to the enzymatic resources of bacterial cells that use them as electron acceptors. The effect of microbial fouling changed the parameters of materials in different directions: for Cr, in most cases, downward, and for Cd, significantly upward. Moreover, chromium biological recovery by biofilms is an additional effect of immobilization. Varying the composition of the sorption material provides for selecting mixtures that are optimally suitable for the purification of leachates from solid waste landfills with high COD and nutrients load, both when used in situ and in surface systems.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 1238
Author(s):  
Garven M. Huntley ◽  
Rudy L. Luck ◽  
Michael E. Mullins ◽  
Nick K. Newberry

Four naturally occurring zeolites were examined to verify their assignments as chabazites AZLB-Ca and AZLB-Na (Bowie, Arizona) and clinoptilolites NM-Ca (Winston, New Mexico) and NV-Na (Ash Meadows, Nevada). Based on powder X-ray diffraction, NM-Ca was discovered to be mostly quartz with some clinoptilolite residues. Treatment with concentrated HCl (12.1 M) acid resulted in AZLB-Ca and AZLB-Na, the chabazite-like species, becoming amorphous, as confirmed by powder X-ray diffraction. In contrast, NM-Ca and NV-Na, which are clinoptilolite-like species, withstood boiling in concentrated HCl acid. This treatment removes calcium, magnesium, sodium, potassium, aluminum, and iron atoms or ions from the framework while leaving the silicon framework intact as confirmed via X-ray fluorescence and diffraction. SEM images on calcined and HCl treated NV-Na were obtained. BET surface area analysis confirmed an increase in surface area for the two zeolites after treatment, NM-Ca 20.0(1) to 111(4) m2/g and NV-Na 19.0(4) to 158(7) m2/g. 29Si and 27Al MAS NMR were performed on the natural and treated NV-Na zeolite, and the data for the natural NV-Na zeolite suggested a Si:Al ratio of 4.33 similar to that determined by X-Ray fluorescence of 4.55. Removal of lead ions from solution decreased from the native NM-Ca, 0.27(14), NV-Na, 1.50(17) meq/g compared to the modified zeolites, 30 min HCl treated NM-Ca 0.06(9) and NV-Na, 0.41(23) meq/g, and also decreased upon K+ ion pretreatment in the HCl modified zeolites.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 217
Author(s):  
Marin Ugrina ◽  
Martin Gaberšek ◽  
Aleksandra Daković ◽  
Ivona Nuić

Sulfur-impregnated zeolite has been obtained from the natural zeolite clinoptilolite by chemical modification with Na2S at 150 °C. The purpose of zeolite impregnation was to enhance the sorption of Hg(II) from aqueous solutions. Chemical analysis, acid and basic properties determined by Bohem’s method, chemical behavior at different pHo values, zeta potential, cation-exchange capacity (CEC), specific surface area, X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray analysis (SEM-EDS), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), as well as thermogravimetry with derivative thermogravimetry (TG-DTG) were used for detailed comparative mineralogical and physico-chemical characterization of natural and sulfur-impregnated zeolites. Results revealed that the surface of the natural zeolite was successfully impregnated with sulfur species in the form of FeS and CaS. Chemical modification caused an increase in basicity and the net negative surface charge due to an increase in oxygen-containing functional groups as well as a decrease in specific surface area and crystallinity due to the formation of sulfur-containing clusters at the zeolite surface. The sorption of Hg(II) species onto the sulfur-impregnated zeolite was affected by the pH, solid/liquid ratio, initial Hg(II) concentration, and contact time. The optimal sorption conditions were determined as pH 2, a solid/liquid ratio of 10 g/L, and a contact time of 800 min. The maximum obtained sorption capacity of the sulfur-impregnated zeolite toward Hg(II) was 1.02 mmol/g. The sorption mechanism of Hg(II) onto the sulfur-impregnated zeolite involves electrostatic attraction, ion exchange, and surface complexation, accompanied by co-precipitation of Hg(II) in the form of HgS. It was found that sulfur-impregnation enhanced the sorption of Hg(II) by 3.6 times compared to the natural zeolite. The leaching test indicated the retention of Hg(II) in the zeolite structure over a wide pH range, making this sulfur-impregnated sorbent a promising material for the remediation of a mercury-polluted environment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 156 ◽  
pp. 105049
Author(s):  
Sangjin Han ◽  
Kye Sang Yoo ◽  
Daekeun Kim ◽  
Jinsoo Kim ◽  
Mohd Roslee Othman

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