Abstract

Ball-milled plastic char (BMPC) was manufactured by ball-milling of native plastic char (PC) that was synthesized via slow pyrolysis of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) water bottle waste, and its adsorption characteristics of aqueous phenanthrene (PHE), phenol, and 2,4,6-trichlorophenol (2,4,6-TCP) and its possible mechanisms were investigated. With the increase of PC pyrolysis temperature, the specific surface area of BMPC increased obviously, forming larger functional groups compared to PC. Boehm titration showed that total acidic groups of BMPC decreased significantly with the increase of pyrolysis temperature. The sorption kinetics of three adsorbates was adequately simulated by pseudo-second-order model (R2 > 0.99). Langmuir model fitted well the adsorption isotherms of PHE and phenol, while Freundlich model simulated the adsorption isotherm of 2,4,6-TCP better. The adsorption amount of PHE, phenol, and 2,4,6-TCP increased significantly as the pyrolysis temperature increased. The maximum BMPC adsorption capacity reached 21.9mg·g-1 (for PHE), 106mg·g-1 (for phenol), and 303mg·g-1 (for 2,4,6-TCP) at 25°C in aqueous solution. FTIR analysis suggested that surface sorption-based π-π interaction was a dominant mechanism of PHE adsorption; meanwhile, H-bonding between O-containing groups on BMPC and hydroxyl groups of adsorbates was responsible for phenol and 2,4,6-TCP removal. This paper shows that BMPC can be used as adsorbent for treating aromatic compounds in aqueous environment and has an economic worth of application.

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