Logo image
MD simulation of organics adsorption from aqueous solution in carbon slit-like pores. Foundations of the pore blocking effect
Journal article   Peer reviewed

MD simulation of organics adsorption from aqueous solution in carbon slit-like pores. Foundations of the pore blocking effect

Piotr A Gauden, Artur P Terzyk, Sylwester Furmaniak, Jerzy W och, Piotr Kowalczyk and Wojciech Zieli ski
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter, Vol.26, 055008
2014
PMID: 24356213

Abstract

activated carbon adsorption from solution benzene kinetics molecular dynamics simulation paracetamol phenol
The results of systematic studies of organics adsorption from aqueous solutions (at the neutral pH level) in a system of slit-like carbon pores having different sizes and oxygen groups located at the pore mouth are reported. Using molecular dynamics simulations (GROMACS package) the properties of adsorbent-adsorbate (benzene, phenol or paracetamol) as well as adsorbent-water systems are discussed. After the introduction of surface oxygen functionalities, adsorption of organic compounds decreases (in accordance with experimental data) and this is caused by the accumulation of water molecules at pore entrances. The pore blocking effect decreases with the diameter of slits and practically vanishes for widths larger than approx. 0.68 nm. We observed the increase in phenol adsorption with the rise in temperature. Moreover, adsorbed molecules occupy the external surface of the slit pores (the entrances) in the case of oxidized adsorbents. Among the studied molecules benzene, phenol and paracetamol prefer an almost flat orientation and with the rise in the pore width the number of molecules oriented in parallel decreases. The decrease or increase in temperature (with respect to 298 K) leads to insignificant changes of angular orientation of adsorbed molecules.

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#6 Clean Water and Sanitation

Source: InCites

Metrics

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
2 Chemistry
2.90 Water Treatment
2.90.27 Adsorption
Web Of Science research areas
Physics, Condensed Matter
ESI research areas
Physics
Logo image