4.6 Article

Change in Organic Molecule Adhesion on α-Alumina (Sapphire) with Change in NaCl and CaCl2 Solution Salinity

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 30, Issue 29, Pages 8741-8750

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la500791m

Keywords

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Funding

  1. BP Exploration Operating Company Limited, under ExploRe Programme
  2. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC Program) [EP/I001514/1]
  3. EPSRC [EP/I001514/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  4. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/I001514/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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We investigated the adhesion of two functional groups to alpha-alumina as a model for the adsorption of organic molecules on clay minerals. Interactions between organic compounds and clay minerals play an important role in processes such as drinking water treatment, remediation of contaminated soil, oil recovery, and fabricating complicated nanomaterials, and there have been claims that organic compound clay mineral interaction created the ordering that is necessary for the genesis of life. In many organisms, interaction between organic molecules and biominerals makes it possible to control the growth of bones, teeth, and shells. Adhesion of carboxylic acid, -COO(H), and pyridine, -C5H5N(H+), on the {0001} plane of alpha-alumina wafers has been investigated with atomic force microscopy (AFM) in chemical force mapping (CFM) mode. Both functional groups adhered to alpha-alumina in deionized water at pH < 5, and adhesion decreased as NaCl or CaCl2 concentration increased. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) showed that Na+ and Ca2+ adsorbed to the alpha-alumina surface at pH < 5, decreasing surface interaction with the carboxylic acid and pyridine groups. We interpret the results as evidence that the tips adhere to alumina through hydrogen bonding when only water is present. In solutions containing NaCl and CaCl2, cations are adsorbed but Cl- is not. When NaCl solutions are replaced by CaCl2, Ca2+ replaces Na+, but rinsing with ultrapure deionized water (pH 5.6) could not restore the original protonated surface. The results demonstrate that the alumina surface at pH 3 has a higher affinity for inorganic cations than for -COO(H) or -C5H5N(H+), in spite of the known positive surface charge of alpha-alumina {0001} wafers. These results demonstrate that solution salinity plays an important role in surface properties, controlling surface tension (i.e., contact angle) and adsorption affinity on alpha-alumina and, by analogy, on clay minerals.

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