Green Chemistry Letters and Reviews (Jan 2022)
Molecular adsorption by biochar produced by eco-friendly low-temperature carbonation investigated using graphene structural reconfigurations
Abstract
Biochar is a promising material for environmental amendment. However, the adsorption mechanism of nitrogen-based ionic species, particularly the pH dependence, is still under debate because of its high susceptibility to experimental conditions. In this study, the adsorption of ammonium sulfate by rice-husk biochar produced by low-temperature carbonation as an eco-friendly approach was studied using Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy, 13C magic-angle spinning (MAS) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and open-space analysis using positrons coupled with molecular simulations. In the aqueous solution with pH of 5.38, graphenes are isolated exposing fresh surfaces, which physisorb [Formula: see text] via interaction with π electrons rather than surface functional groups. Furthermore, the low-temperature carbonation leads to a lower degree of graphitization with grain boundary defects in graphene, triggering the fracture of graphene during the shaking process in an aqueous solution. [Formula: see text] physisorption occurs as an outer-sphere surface complex on the positive charge caused by a charge transfer of ∼2.5% from the terminal hydrogen at the graphene edge. A decrease in aqueous pH by ∼0.7% significantly changes the above adsorption properties both on the surfaces and at the edges: diminishment of physisorption and transition to chemisorption by the formation of an inner-sphere surface complex.
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