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Biomass derived palygorskite-carbon nanocomposites: Synthesis, characterisation and affinity to dye compounds

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 23:11 authored by Binoy Sarkar, Erming Liu, Stuart McClure, Jayaraman Sundaramurthy, Madapusi Srinivasan, Ravi Naidu
Clay minerals can act as a uniform dispersion medium for nano-sized carbon particles. However, literature on the preparation and characteristics of palygorskite-carbon nanocomposites is scant. Using a hydrothermal carbonisation technique this study developed two nanocomposites on fibrous palygorskite from starch: the first without a post-synthesis treatment (Composite 1); and the second with an activation at 550 °C for 3 h (ramp at 10 °C min-1 ) under CO2 environment (200 mL min-1 ) (Composite 2). A uniform dispersion of nanoscale carbon spheres was formed on partially destroyed palygorskite structures. Composite 2, which indicated the formation of graphitised carbon nanoparticles, generated a 17-fold greater specific surface area than Composite 1 and also created micro- and mesopores in its structure. The nanocomposites, especially in Composite 1, contained organic surface functional groups (C\\H, C_C, C_O) and indicated variable affinity to cationic and anionic dye compounds. While Composite 2 adsorbed a larger amount of anionic orange II dye (23 mg g-1 ), Composite 1 adsorbed more cationic methylene blue (46.3 mg g-1 ). Isothermal and kinetic modelling of the adsorption data indicated that in addition to electrostatic attraction for methylene blue adsorption on both nanocomposites, a pore diffusion mechanism was involved and the boundary resistance was greater for orange II than methylene blue adsorption. Being a material developed from green biomass (starch) and an abundant natural resource (palygorskite), these nanocomposites have immense potential for application in environmental remediation including in situ immobilisation of contaminants in soil.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1016/j.clay.2015.07.001
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 01691317

Journal

Applied Clay Science

Volume

114

Start page

617

End page

626

Total pages

10

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 Elsevier B.V

Former Identifier

2006055069

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-09-29

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