Fast and Slow Rates of
Naphthalene Sorption to Biochars
Produced at Different Temperatures
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
This study investigated the sorption kinetics of a model
solute
(naphthalene) with a series of biochars prepared from a pine wood
at 150–700 °C (referred as PW100–PW700) to probe
the effect of the degree of carbonization of a biochar. The samples
were characterized by the elemental compositions, thermal gravimetric
analyses, Fourier transform IR spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy,
Brunauer–Emmett–Teller-N<sub>2</sub> surface areas (SA),
and pore size distributions. Naphthalene exhibited a fast rate of
sorption to PW150 owning a high oxygen content and a small SA, due
supposedly to the solute partition into a swollen well-hydrated uncarbonized
organic matter of PW150. The partial removal of polar-group contents
in PW250/PW350, which increased the compactness of the partition medium,
decreased the diffusion of the solute into the partition phase to
result in a slow sorption rate. With PW500 and PW700 displaying low
oxygen contents and high SA, the solute sorption rates were fast,
attributed to the near exhaustion of a partition phase in the sample
and to the fast solute adsorption on the carbonized biochar component.
The results illustrate that the sorption rate of a solute with biochars
is controlled largely by the solute’s diffusivity in the biochar’s
partition phase, in which the medium compactness affects directly
the solute diffusivity