2 research outputs found
Adsorption of Indole on Kaolinite in Nonaqueous Media: Organoclay Preparation and Characterization, and 3D-RISM-KH Molecular Theory of Solvation Investigation
Current
oil sand mining operations in the Athabasca basin are predominantly
aqueous-based. Extracts containing large amounts of fines lead to
the formation of stable organoclay suspensions in froths giving lower
yields and greater tailing wastes and making the development of more
efficient extraction methods desirable from both economical and environmental
perspectives. We examine an indole-kaolinite system as a model for
these oil fines and their resistance to washing in nonaqueous solvents.
The prepared organoclays show indole loading exclusively on the external
surface of the clay. Micron-scaled vermicular structures, similar
to natural kaolinite, are observed. Their formation is believed to
be driven by strong adsorbate–adsorbate interactions. Indole
is the primary adsorbate, as solvent adsorption is shown to be minimal
based on both experimental and computational results. Isotherms are
constructed and parameters calculated from linear regression analysis
fitted to the Brunauer–Emmett–Teller equation. Monolayer
quantities calculated match well to the theoretical amount calculated
from surface areas measurements. Washing the organoclays with both
toluene and isopropanol results in a 50% decrease of loaded organic
material, leaving a monolayer equivalent of organic matter. The statistical-mechanical
3D-RISM-KH molecular theory of solvation is employed to perform full
sampling of solvent orientations around a kaolinite platelet and gain
insights into the preferred orientation and adsorption thermodynamics
of indole on kaolinite in toluene and heptane solvents. In its preferred
orientation, indole is hydrogen-bonded to one or two O atoms at the
aluminum hydroxide surface of kaolinite. The calculated solvation
free energy and potential of mean force for adsorption of indole and
solvents on kaolinite in solution yield the increasing adsorption
strength order of heptane < toluene < indole on the aluminum
hydroxide surface. Multilayer adsorption profiles are predicted based
on the integrated three-dimensional distribution functions of indole,
toluene, and heptane
Molecule–Surface Recognition between Heterocyclic Aromatic Compounds and Kaolinite in Toluene Investigated by Molecular Theory of Solvation and Thermodynamic and Kinetic Experiments
Molecular recognition interactions
between kaolinite and a series of heterocyclic aromatic compounds
(HAC) representative of the N- and S-containing moieties in petroleum
asphaltene macromolecules are investigated using the three-dimensional
reference interaction site model with the Kovalenko–Hirata
closure approximation (3D-RISM-KH) theory of solvation and experimental
techniques in toluene solvent. The statistical-mechanical 3D-RISM-KH
molecular theory of solvation predicts the adsorption configuration
and thermodynamics from the 3D site density distribution functions
and total solvation free energy, respectively, for adsorption of HAC
and toluene on kaolinite. Spectrophotometric measurements show that,
among the HAC studied, only acridine and phenanthridine adsorb quantitatively
on kaolinite. For these pyridinic HAC, the adsorption results fitted
to the Langmuir isotherm in the monolayer domain suggest a uniform
monolayer of HAC molecules. The 3D-RISM-KH studies predict that the
aluminum hydroxide surface of kaolinite is preferred for HAC adsorption
due to strong hydrogen bonding with the pyridinic N atoms, while the
rest of the HAC adsorb weaker. Adsorption on the silicon oxide side
is weak and delocalized, as evident from the 3D solvation free energy
density. Toluene sites effectively compete with non-hydrogen bonding
HAC, such as fused thiophenes, for the kaolinite surface. The adsorption
enthalpy and phenanthridine-acridine loading ratio are calculated
and correlated with the experimentally determined Langmuir constant
and adsorption loading. This combined experimental and computational
modeling approach is aimed to provide insight into the specific interactions
among clays, bitumen, and solvents so as to help accelerate the development
of environmentally friendly and efficient desorption systems for nonaqueous
extraction of bitumen from Oil Sands, an important unconventional
petroleum reserve