Enhanced Adsorption
of Hydroxyl- and Amino-Substituted Aromatic Chemicals to Nitrogen-Doped
Multiwall Carbon Nanotubes: A Combined Batch and Theoretical Calculation
Study
posted on 2016-01-19, 00:00authored byLinzi Zuo, Yong Guo, Xiao Li, Heyun Fu, Xiaolei Qu, Shourong Zheng, Cheng Gu, Dongqiang Zhu, Pedro
J. J. Alvarez
A large effort is being made to develop nanosorbents with tunable
surface chemistry for enhanced adsorption affinity and selectivity
toward target organic contaminants. Heteroatom N-doped multiwall carbon
nanotubes (N-MCNT) were synthesized by chemical vapor deposition of
pyridine and were further investigated for the adsorptive removal
of several aromatic chemicals varying in electronic donor and acceptor
ability from aqueous solutions using a batch technique. Compared with
commercial nondoped multiwall carbon nanotubes (MCNT), N-MCNT had
similar specific surface area, morphology, and pore-size distribution
but more hydrophilic surfaces and more surface defects due to the
doping of graphitic and pyridinic N atoms. N-MCNT exhibited enhanced
adsorption (2–10 folds) for the π-donor chemicals (2-naphthol
and 1-naphthalmine) at pH ∼6 but similar adsorption for the
weak π-donor chemical (naphthalene) and even lower adsorption
(up to a 2-fold change) for the π-acceptor chemical (1,3-dinitrobenzene).
The enhanced adsorption of 2-naphthol and 1-naphthalmine to N-MCNT
was mainly attributed to the favored π–π electron-donor–acceptor
(EDA) interaction between the π-donor adsorbate molecule and
the polarized N-heterocyclic aromatic ring (π-acceptor) on N-MCNT.
The proposed adsorption enhancement mechanisms were further tested
through the pH effects on adsorption and the density function theory
(DFT) calculation. The results show for the first time that the adsorptive
interaction of π-donor aromatic compounds with carbon nanomaterials
can be facilitated by N-doping.