Adsorption of Aromatic Hydrocarbons at Gas-Water Interface

Adsorption of organic vapors at a gas-water interface has several physical applications with respect to natural processes in the environment. Understanding the adsorption processes is critical in development of risk assessment and modeling of transport and fate of various chemical species that are a...

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Main Author: Raja, Suresh
Other Authors: Louis Thibodeaux
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: LSU 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1110103-200134/
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spelling ndltd-LSU-oai-etd.lsu.edu-etd-1110103-2001342013-01-07T22:48:53Z Adsorption of Aromatic Hydrocarbons at Gas-Water Interface Raja, Suresh Chemical Engineering Adsorption of organic vapors at a gas-water interface has several physical applications with respect to natural processes in the environment. Understanding the adsorption processes is critical in development of risk assessment and modeling of transport and fate of various chemical species that are abundantly present in the environment. Evidences from the works of several researchers point out deviations in gas-liquid partitioning as predicted by Henrys law. In view of several theories that describe these deviations, adsorption process is hypothesized to be significant in gas-liquid partitioning, in addition to temperature and presence of organic matter, particularly on liquid surfaces with high surface to volume ratio. Implications of these adsorption and thermodynamic parameters of chemical species have been applied to its atmospheric fate and transport. In this work, inverse gas chromatography has been used to determine surface adsorption partition constant for organic compounds such as benzene, naphthalene and phenanthrene. A water-coated diatomaceous earth was used as the packing support material in the chromatographic column. The probe used to study this gas-liquid partitioning was obtained in vapor phase and injected in the chromatograph with dry support material and water coated support. The retention volume on the water-coated support, depends on two processes, the adsorption and dissolution process in the liquid coated surface, and was primarily used to extract the partition constants. The Gibbs-Helmholtz equation was used to determine the enthalpy of adsorption. The enthalpy of adsorption indicates that the adsorption process is more favorable at the gas-solid interface than at the gas-water interface, supporting the surface morphology theory based on fractal dimensions. The enthalpy of adsorption at the gas-water interface for all three compounds was larger than the enthalpy of condensation and the enthalpy of aqueous solvation. This supports the prevailing critical cluster model for the dynamics of the transfer of compounds from the gas-water interface. The partition constant at the gas-water interface was correlated with the sub-cooled liquid vapor pressure of the PAHs along with data obtained from other works. Partition constants indicate that the most hydrophobic compound will experience enhanced surface adsorption and hence scavenged the most by wet deposition process. Louis Thibodeaux K.T. Valsaraj Danny Reible LSU 2003-11-11 text application/pdf http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1110103-200134/ http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1110103-200134/ en unrestricted I hereby grant to LSU or its agents the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in the University Libraries in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation.
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical Engineering
spellingShingle Chemical Engineering
Raja, Suresh
Adsorption of Aromatic Hydrocarbons at Gas-Water Interface
description Adsorption of organic vapors at a gas-water interface has several physical applications with respect to natural processes in the environment. Understanding the adsorption processes is critical in development of risk assessment and modeling of transport and fate of various chemical species that are abundantly present in the environment. Evidences from the works of several researchers point out deviations in gas-liquid partitioning as predicted by Henrys law. In view of several theories that describe these deviations, adsorption process is hypothesized to be significant in gas-liquid partitioning, in addition to temperature and presence of organic matter, particularly on liquid surfaces with high surface to volume ratio. Implications of these adsorption and thermodynamic parameters of chemical species have been applied to its atmospheric fate and transport. In this work, inverse gas chromatography has been used to determine surface adsorption partition constant for organic compounds such as benzene, naphthalene and phenanthrene. A water-coated diatomaceous earth was used as the packing support material in the chromatographic column. The probe used to study this gas-liquid partitioning was obtained in vapor phase and injected in the chromatograph with dry support material and water coated support. The retention volume on the water-coated support, depends on two processes, the adsorption and dissolution process in the liquid coated surface, and was primarily used to extract the partition constants. The Gibbs-Helmholtz equation was used to determine the enthalpy of adsorption. The enthalpy of adsorption indicates that the adsorption process is more favorable at the gas-solid interface than at the gas-water interface, supporting the surface morphology theory based on fractal dimensions. The enthalpy of adsorption at the gas-water interface for all three compounds was larger than the enthalpy of condensation and the enthalpy of aqueous solvation. This supports the prevailing critical cluster model for the dynamics of the transfer of compounds from the gas-water interface. The partition constant at the gas-water interface was correlated with the sub-cooled liquid vapor pressure of the PAHs along with data obtained from other works. Partition constants indicate that the most hydrophobic compound will experience enhanced surface adsorption and hence scavenged the most by wet deposition process.
author2 Louis Thibodeaux
author_facet Louis Thibodeaux
Raja, Suresh
author Raja, Suresh
author_sort Raja, Suresh
title Adsorption of Aromatic Hydrocarbons at Gas-Water Interface
title_short Adsorption of Aromatic Hydrocarbons at Gas-Water Interface
title_full Adsorption of Aromatic Hydrocarbons at Gas-Water Interface
title_fullStr Adsorption of Aromatic Hydrocarbons at Gas-Water Interface
title_full_unstemmed Adsorption of Aromatic Hydrocarbons at Gas-Water Interface
title_sort adsorption of aromatic hydrocarbons at gas-water interface
publisher LSU
publishDate 2003
url http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1110103-200134/
work_keys_str_mv AT rajasuresh adsorptionofaromatichydrocarbonsatgaswaterinterface
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