A fluorescence spectroscopic study of phenanthrene sorption on porous silica
Autor: | Michael J. Truex, Donald M. Friedrich, Brent M. Peyton, Michael H. Huesemann, Alan G. Joly, Christopher J. Thompson, Zheming Wang, S. L. Hemmer, Robert G. Riley, Beversluis Mr |
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Rok vydání: | 2001 |
Předmět: |
Fluorescence spectrometry
Analytical chemistry Sorption General Chemistry Microporous material Phenanthrene Mesoporous silica Phenanthrenes Silicon Dioxide Sensitivity and Specificity Fluorescence spectroscopy Absorption Diffusion chemistry.chemical_compound Chemical state Spectrometry Fluorescence chemistry Desorption Environmental Chemistry Organic chemistry Particle Size Water Pollutants Chemical |
Zdroj: | Environmental sciencetechnology. 35(13) |
ISSN: | 0013-936X |
Popis: | Fluorescence spectroscopic characteristics of sorbed phenanthrene in porous silica provide information about its chemical state such as monomer vs dimer or higher aggregates, as well as a basis for high sensitivity detection. In this study, the chemical state and distribution of phenanthrene sorbed in two types of porous silica particles, mesoporous silica (365 microns particle diameter, 150 A average pore diameter) and microporous silica (custom synthethized, 1 micron particle diameter, 20 A pore diameter), is determined by fluorescence spectroscopy, fluorescence lifetime measurements, and scanning two-photon excitation fluorescence profiling. From the characteristic fluorescence emission spectra, it is found that at loading levels ofor = 4.7 mg/g (phenanthrene/silica) phenanthrene exists as monomers in both meso- and microporous silica particles for phenanthrene loaded from super critical CO2 (SCF). Two-photon excitation fluorescence intensity distribution profiles indicate that for the mesoporous silica particles phenanthrene is adsorbed throughout the entire silica particle. Introduction of water into phenanthrene-loaded mesoporous silica particles causes instantaneous conversion of phenanthrene from monomer to crystalline form at phenantherene loading levelsor = 4.7 micrograms/g due to hydration of the silica surface. In this process, sorption of water molecules expels phenanthrene from the surface sorption sites and causes localized phenanthrene concentration beyond its solubility limit, resulting in crystallization. In comparison this fast conversion is not observed for phenanthrene-loaded microporous silica particles that show extremely slow conversion even for phenanthrene loading levels as high as 4.7 mg/g. This difference is interpreted as reflecting hindered diffusion of phenanthrene in the nearly monodispersed micropores with pore sizes close to the molecular diameter of phenanthrene. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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