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Journal ArticleDOI

Sorption hysteresis of benzene in charcoal particles.

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TLDR
It is proposed that intra-charcoal mass transport may be influenced by structural rearrangement of the solid, in addition to molecular diffusion, which results in the pathway of sorption being different than the pathways of desorption and which leads to entrapment of some adsorbate as the polyaromatic scaffold collapses during desor adaptation.
Abstract
Charcoal is found in water, soil, and sediment where it may act as a sorbent of organic pollutants. The sorption of organic compounds to natural solids often shows hysteresis. The purpose of this study was to determine the source of pronounced hysteresis that we found in the sorption of a hydrophobic compound (benzene) in water to a maple-wood charcoal prepared by oxygen-limited pyrolysis at 673 K. Gas adsorption (N2, Ar, CO2), 13C NMR, and FTIR show the charcoal to be a microporous solid composed primarily of elemental (aromatic) C and secondarily of carboxyl and phenolic C. Nonlocal density functional theory (N2, Ar) and Monte Carlo (CO2) calculations reveal a porosity of 0.15 cm3/g, specific surface area of 400 m2/g, and appreciable porosity in ultramicropores <10 A. Benzene sorption−desorption conditions were chosen to eliminate artificial causes of hysteresis (rate-limiting diffusion, degradation, colloids effect). Charcoal sorbed up to its own weight of benzene at ∼69% of benzene water solubility. S...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Black Carbon Increases Cation Exchange Capacity in Soils

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the source of the higher surface charge of BC compared with non-BC by mapping crosssectional areas of BC particles with diameters of 10 to 50 mm for C forms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transitional Adsorption and Partition of Nonpolar and Polar Aromatic Contaminants by Biochars of Pine Needles with Different Pyrolytic Temperatures

TL;DR: Biochars, produced by pyrolysis of pine needles at different temperatures, were characterized by elemental analysis, BET-N2 surface areas and FTIR, and Sorption isotherms of naphthalene, nitrobenzene, and m-dinitrobenZene from water to the biochars were compared.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extensive sorption of organic compounds to black carbon, coal, and kerogen in sediments and soils: mechanisms and consequences for distribution, bioaccumulation, and biodegradation

TL;DR: It is advocated that the use of generic organic carbon-water distribution coefficients in the risk assessment of organic compounds is not warranted and that bioremediation endpoints could be evaluated on the basis of freely dissolved concentrations instead of total concentrations in sediment/soil.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compositions and sorptive properties of crop residue-derived chars.

TL;DR: Chars originating from the burning or pyrolysis of vegetation may significantly sorb neutral organic contaminants (NOCs) and appear to have a higher surface affinity for a polar solute (nitrobenzene) than for a nonpolar Solute (benzenes), the difference being related to the surface acidity/basicity of the char samples.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface chemistry variations among a series of laboratory-produced biochars

TL;DR: In this article, surface properties of a range of biochar types were examined to understand how these properties were related to biochar production conditions, as well as eachother, in order to optimizethe properties of Biochar for specific purposes such as nutrient retention, pH amelioration or contaminant remediation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Some aspects of the surface chemistry of carbon blacks and other carbons

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the surface chemistry of carbon blacks and other activated carbons is given, focusing on surface oxides with emphasis on the chemical methods used in the assessment and identification of surface functional groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combustion aerosols: factors governing their size and composition and implications to human health.

TL;DR: Particle surface area, number of ultrafine particles, bioavailable transition metals, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), and other particle-bound organic compounds are suspected to be more important than particle mass in determining the effects of air pollution.
Book

The solid-gas interface,

Book

Encyclopedia of environmental analysis and remediation

TL;DR: The Encyclopedia of Environmental Analysis and Remediation (EEAR) as mentioned in this paper provides an in-depth examination of the environmental analysis and remediation fields in a single eight-volume reference source.
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