4.8 Article

Sorption of Four Hydrophobic Organic Compounds by Three Chemically Distinct Polymers: Role of Chemical and Physical Composition

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 13, Pages 7252-7259

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es301386z

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [40971246, 40730737]
  2. National Basic Research Program [2007CB407301]
  3. Startup Fund for the Peking University 100-Talent Program
  4. Scientific Research Foundation of the Ministry of China for Returned Chinese Scholars [413-152-008]
  5. Maoyugang Undergraduate Research Program
  6. Peking University [126WO-472-184]
  7. USDA-AFRI [2009-35201-05819]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The sorption behavior of four hydrophobic organic contaminants (HOCs) (i.e., phenanthrene, naphthalene, lindane, and 1-naphthol) by three types of polymers namely polyethylene (PE), polystyrene (PS), and polypheny-leneoxide (PPO) was examined in this work. The organic carbon content-normalized sorption coefficients (K-oc) of phenanthrene, lindane, and naphthalene by PEs of same composition but distinct physical makeup of domains increased with their crystallinity reduction (from 58.7 to 25.5%), suggesting that mobility and abundance of rubbery domains in polymers regulated HOC sorption. Cross-linking in styrene-divinylbenzene copolymer (PS2) created substantial surface area and porosity, thus, K-oc values of phenanthrene, lindane, naphthalene, and 1-naphthol by PS2 were as high as 274.8, 212.3, 27.4, and 1.5 times of those by the linear polystyrene (PSI). The K-oc values of lindane, naphthalene, and 1-naphthol by polar PPO were approximately 1-3 orders of magnitude higher than those by PSI, and PPO had comparable sorption for phenanthrene but higher sorption for naphthalene and 1-naphthol than PS2. This can be a result that a portion of O-containing moieties in PPO were masked in the interior part, while leaving the hydrophobic domains exposed outside, therefore demonstrating the great influence of the spatial arrangement of domains in polymers on HOC sorption.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available