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Download fileAdsorption, Aggregation, and Deposition Behaviors of Carbon Dots on Minerals
journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-02, 00:00 authored by Xia Liu, Jiaxing Li, Yongshun Huang, Xiangxue Wang, Xiaodong Zhang, Xiangke WangThe increased production of carbon
dots (CDs) and the release and accumulation of CDs in both surface
and groundwater has resulted in the increasing interest in their research.
To assess the environmental behavior of CDs, the interaction between
CDs and goethite was studied under different environmental conditions.
Electrokinetic characterization of CDs suggested that the ζ-potential
and size distribution of CDs were affected by pH and electrolyte species,
indicating that these factors influenced the stability of CDs in aqueous
solutions. Traditional Derjaguin–Landau–Verwey–Overbeek
theory did not fit well the aggregation process of CDs. Results of
the effects of pH and ionic strength suggested that electronic attraction
dominated the aggregation of CDs. Compared with other minerals, hydrogen-bonding
interactions and Lewis acid–base interactions contributed to
the aggregation of CDs, in addition to van der Waals and electrical
double-layer forces. Adsorption isotherms and microscopic Fourier
transformed infrared spectroscopy indicated that chemical bonds were
formed between CDs and goethite. These findings are useful to understand
the interaction of CDs with minerals, as well as the potential fate
and toxicity of CDs in the natural environment, especially in soils
and sediments.