4.8 Article

Surfactant-templated mesoporous silicate materials as sorbents for organic pollutants in water

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 22, Pages 4822-4827

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es000990o

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Hexagonal (MCM-41) mesoporous materials were synthesized at 23 degreesC using hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (HDTMA) and tetramethyl-orthosilicate (TMOS) or N-asilicate. Products with las-synthesized and dried at 23 or 70 degreesC) HDTMA removed significant amounts of trichlorethylene and tetrachloroethylene from water, similar to the behavior of organic-cation-exchanged smectites. Products without HDTMA (calcined) were weaker sorbents. Structural Al increased the sorption capacity of as-synthesized products but decreased that of calcined products. Structural Al and synthesis using TMOS both increased the stability of as-synthesized materials in 0.005 M CaCl2. All as-synthesized materials have apparent Si solubilities between those of quartz and amorphous silica. Si dissolution rates for as-synthesized (using Na-silicate) products at pH similar to7-8 are 2-3 orders of magnitude higher than those of quartz and 1 order of magnitude higher than that of glass. Rates show little ionic strength dependence in up to 0.1 M CaCl2 at Si concentrations up to three times quartz solubility. HDTMA leaching increased slightly with decreasing ionic strength; however only 1.5% is removed after exchange with 1050 pore volumes of H2O. The ease of synthesis, environmental stability, and significant sorption capacity indicate that as-synthesized MCM-41 materials could be used as sorbents for organic pollutants in water and as components of contaminant barriers.

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