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1.
Nanoscale Adv ; 4(11): 2435-2443, 2022 May 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36134139

RESUMO

The stability of graphene oxide (GO) in water is extremely relevant because of its application as an adsorbent material, as well as for its fate and behavior in the environment. Zeta potential was used to study the effect of secondary salts (carbonate, sulfate, and phosphate), temperature (20 to 60 °C), and pH (5 to 9) on the stability of six different GOs produced from natural, synthetic, and amorphous graphite-with and without the use of attrition milling. Generally, GOs produced with attrition-milled graphites had lower ζ-potentials than their unmilled counterparts because of their smaller particle sizes and higher concentration of oxygen-containing functional groups. It was observed that GO produced from graphite and synthetic graphite had ζ-potential values lower than -30 mV, even at 30 °C. However, it was observed that all the GOs studied were unstable in the presence of carbonate and sulfate salts at concentrations between 170 and 1695 mg L-1, as they reached a ζ-potential of -4.1 mV. Density-functional theory electronic structure calculations suggested that the instability of GO in the presence of carbonate and sulfate was caused by the abstraction of a proton resulting in interaction energies E int of 28.3 and 168.9 kJ mol-1, respectively. Our results suggest that temperatures above 30 °C, as well as carbonate and sulfate salts at concentrations relevant to arid and semi-arid regions, could promote the formation of agglomerates of GO, thus limiting its use and mobility in water.

2.
J Hazard Mater ; 384: 121440, 2020 02 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31776081

RESUMO

The study of the interaction between graphene oxide (GO) and arsenic is of great relevance not only in the design of adsorbent materials to remove this contaminant but also in the understanding of its combined nanotoxicity. In this work, we show that As(III) adsorption, primarily H3AsO3, by graphene oxide is affected by its degree of oxidation. Three types of GO with C/O ratios between 1.35 and 1.98 were produced, resulting in important variations in the concentration of COH and COC functional groups. The less oxidized material reached a maximum As(III) adsorption capacity of 123 mg/g, whereas the GO with the highest degree of oxidation reached a value of 288 mg/g at pH 7, the highest reported in the literature. We also show that sulfates and carbonates present in water strongly inhibit As(III) adsorption. The interaction between graphene oxide and As(III) was also studied by Density Functional Theory (DFT) computer models showing that graphene oxide interacts with As(III) primarily through hydrogen bonds, having interaction energies with the hydroxyl and epoxide groups of 1508.6 and 1583.6 kJ/mol, respectively. Finally, cytotoxicity tests showed that the graphene oxide maintained cellular viability of 57% with 50 µg/ml, regardless of its degree of oxidation.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 120(46): 9244-9248, 2016 Nov 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27800689

RESUMO

Two of the most commonly encountered friction-reducing agents used in plastic sheet production are the amides known as erucamide and behenamide, which despite being almost identical chemically, lead to markedly different values of the friction coefficient. To understand the origin of this contrasting behavior, in this work we model brushes made of these two types of linear-chain molecules using quantum mechanical numerical simulations under the density functional theory at the B97D/6-31G(d,p) level of theory. Four chains of erucamide and behenamide were linked to a 2 × 10 zigzag graphene sheet and optimized both in vacuum and in continuous solvent using the SMD implicit solvation model. We find that erucamide chains tend to remain closer together through π-π stacking interactions arising from the double bonds located at C13-C14, a feature behenamide lacks, and thus a more spread configuration is obtained with the latter. It is argued that this arrangement of the erucamide chains is responsible for the lower friction coefficient of erucamide brushes, compared with behenamide brushes, which is a macroscopic consequence of cooperative quantum mechanical interactions. While only quantum level interactions are modeled here, we show that behenamide chains are more spread out in the brush than erucamide chains as a consequence of those interactions. The spread-out configuration allows more solvent particles to penetrate the brush, leading in turn to more friction, in agreement with macroscopic measurements and mesoscale simulations of the friction coefficient reported in the literature.

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