Abstract

The presence of organic contaminants (OCs) in aquatic systems is a threat to ecological and human health. Adsorption by graphene-based adsorbent is a promising technique for OC removal and we previously fabricated crumpled graphene balls (CGBs), via a novel nano-spray drying technique, which show robust adsorptive performance. Yet, since CGBs contain non-accessible surface area due to 2D graphene stacking, the goal of this research was to investigate the efficacy of maximizing the accessible CGB surface by synthesizing a nanocomposite composed of metal oxide nanoparticles encapsulated by crumpled graphene oxide (MGC). The metal oxides reduce graphene oxide stacking, expand the internal adsorptive surface area, and boost the adsorptive capacity of the MGC. MGC (fumed SiO2 or SiO2) exhibit an enhanced Langmuir adsorption capacity (qm, normalized by the % carbon) for an OC model, methylene blue (MB), achieving improvements of 60-86% compared to CGB, 3-4 fold compared to powder activated carbon (PAC) and 6-7 fold compared to granular activated carbon (GAC). MGCs display rapid adsorption reaching equilibrium after 9-12min of contact and remaining stable in wastewater effluent /surface water. A cost-efficiency comparison reveals MGCs achieve one ton of MB removal at similar or lower material costs than that of PAC/GAC.

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