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Reduced graphene oxide–metal nanoparticle composite membranes for environmental separation and chloro-organic remediation

This study explores the integration of separation performance of rGO membrane with heterogeneous oxidation reactions for remediation of organic contaminants from water. Herein, an approach was introduced based on layer-by-layer assembly for functionalizing rGO membranes with polyacrylic acid and the...

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Autores principales: Aher, Ashish, Thompson, Samuel, Nickerson, Trisha, Ormsbee, Lindell, Bhattacharyya, Dibakar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7039523/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32095233
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra08178j
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author Aher, Ashish
Thompson, Samuel
Nickerson, Trisha
Ormsbee, Lindell
Bhattacharyya, Dibakar
author_facet Aher, Ashish
Thompson, Samuel
Nickerson, Trisha
Ormsbee, Lindell
Bhattacharyya, Dibakar
author_sort Aher, Ashish
collection PubMed
description This study explores the integration of separation performance of rGO membrane with heterogeneous oxidation reactions for remediation of organic contaminants from water. Herein, an approach was introduced based on layer-by-layer assembly for functionalizing rGO membranes with polyacrylic acid and then by in situ synthesis of Fe based reactive nanoparticles. TEM characterization of the cross-section lamella of the membranes showed a high density of nanoparticles (12% Fe) in the functionalized domain, signifying the importance of polyacrylic acid for in situ synthesis of nanoparticles. The membranes exhibited a pure water permeability of 1.9 LMH bar(−1). The membranes had low to moderate salt retention, and more than 90% neutral red retention (organic probe molecule, size: 1.2 nm). The membranes also exhibited high retention of humic acids (80%), preventing these organics from entering the reactive domain, and thus potentially reducing the formation of undesired by-products. A persulfate mediated oxidative pathway was employed to demonstrate the reactive removal of organic contaminants. The membranes achieved >95% conversion by convectively passing 2 mM persulfate feed at a transmembrane pressure of 0.4 bar. Successful degradation of TCE (up to 61%) was achieved in a single pass by convective flowing of the feed solution through the membrane, generating up to 80% of the theoretical maximum chloride as one of the byproducts. Elevated temperatures significantly enhanced persulfate mediated TCE oxidation extent from 24% at 23 °C to 54% at 40 °C under batch operating conditions.
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spelling pubmed-70395232020-02-24 Reduced graphene oxide–metal nanoparticle composite membranes for environmental separation and chloro-organic remediation Aher, Ashish Thompson, Samuel Nickerson, Trisha Ormsbee, Lindell Bhattacharyya, Dibakar RSC Adv Chemistry This study explores the integration of separation performance of rGO membrane with heterogeneous oxidation reactions for remediation of organic contaminants from water. Herein, an approach was introduced based on layer-by-layer assembly for functionalizing rGO membranes with polyacrylic acid and then by in situ synthesis of Fe based reactive nanoparticles. TEM characterization of the cross-section lamella of the membranes showed a high density of nanoparticles (12% Fe) in the functionalized domain, signifying the importance of polyacrylic acid for in situ synthesis of nanoparticles. The membranes exhibited a pure water permeability of 1.9 LMH bar(−1). The membranes had low to moderate salt retention, and more than 90% neutral red retention (organic probe molecule, size: 1.2 nm). The membranes also exhibited high retention of humic acids (80%), preventing these organics from entering the reactive domain, and thus potentially reducing the formation of undesired by-products. A persulfate mediated oxidative pathway was employed to demonstrate the reactive removal of organic contaminants. The membranes achieved >95% conversion by convectively passing 2 mM persulfate feed at a transmembrane pressure of 0.4 bar. Successful degradation of TCE (up to 61%) was achieved in a single pass by convective flowing of the feed solution through the membrane, generating up to 80% of the theoretical maximum chloride as one of the byproducts. Elevated temperatures significantly enhanced persulfate mediated TCE oxidation extent from 24% at 23 °C to 54% at 40 °C under batch operating conditions. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC7039523/ /pubmed/32095233 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra08178j Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Aher, Ashish
Thompson, Samuel
Nickerson, Trisha
Ormsbee, Lindell
Bhattacharyya, Dibakar
Reduced graphene oxide–metal nanoparticle composite membranes for environmental separation and chloro-organic remediation
title Reduced graphene oxide–metal nanoparticle composite membranes for environmental separation and chloro-organic remediation
title_full Reduced graphene oxide–metal nanoparticle composite membranes for environmental separation and chloro-organic remediation
title_fullStr Reduced graphene oxide–metal nanoparticle composite membranes for environmental separation and chloro-organic remediation
title_full_unstemmed Reduced graphene oxide–metal nanoparticle composite membranes for environmental separation and chloro-organic remediation
title_short Reduced graphene oxide–metal nanoparticle composite membranes for environmental separation and chloro-organic remediation
title_sort reduced graphene oxide–metal nanoparticle composite membranes for environmental separation and chloro-organic remediation
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7039523/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32095233
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra08178j
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