Science Inventory

Modeling the Transport of the "New Horizon" Reduced Graphene Oxide—Metal Oxide Nanohybrids in Water-Saturated Porous Media

Citation:

Wang, D., Y. Jin, C. Park, J. Heo, X. Bai, N. Aich, AND C. Su. Modeling the Transport of the "New Horizon" Reduced Graphene Oxide—Metal Oxide Nanohybrids in Water-Saturated Porous Media. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, 52:4610-4622, (2018). https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.7b06488

Impact/Purpose:

This work investigated and successfully predicted the fate and transport of the next-generation of reduced graphene oxide-metal oxide nanohybrids in water-saturated porous media under environmentally relevant conditions using numerical models. The findings will help accurate evaluation of the potential environmental transport and risks of this type of nanohybrids in the subsurface environments.

Description:

Little is known about the fate and transport of the "new-horizon" multifunctional nanohybrids in the environment. Saturated sand-packed column experiments ( n = 66) were therefore performed to investigate the transport and retention of reduced graphene oxide (RGO)-metal oxide (Fe3O4, TiO2, and ZnO) nanohybrids under environmentally relevant conditions (mono- and divalent electrolytes and natural organic matter). Classical colloid science principles (Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory and colloid filtration theory (CFT)) and mathematical models based on the one-dimensional convection-dispersion equation were employed to describe and predict the mobility of RGO-Fe3O4, RGO-TiO2, and RGO-ZnO nanohybrids in porous media. Results indicate that the mobility of the three nanohybrids under varying experimental conditions is overall explainable by DLVO theory and CFT. Numerical simulations suggest that the one-site kinetic retention model (OSKRM) considering both time- and depth-dependent retention accurately approximated the breakthrough curves (BTCs) and retention profiles (RPs) of the nanohybrids concurrently; whereas, others (e.g., two-site retention model) failed to capture the BTCs and/or RPs. This is primarily because blocking BTCs and exponential/hyperexponential/uniform RPs occurred, which is within the framework of OSKRM featuring time- (for kinetic Langmuirian blocking) and depth-dependent (for exponential/hyperexponential/uniform) retention kinetics. Employing fitted parameters (maximum solid-phase retention capacity: Smax = 0.0406-3.06 cm3/g; and first-order attachment rate coefficient: ka = 0.133-20.6 min-1) extracted from the OSKRM and environmentally representative physical variables (flow velocity (0.00441-4.41 cm/min), porosity (0.24-0.54), and grain size (210-810 μm)) as initial input conditions, the long-distance transport scenarios (in 500 cm long sand columns) of the three nanohybrids were predicted via forward simulation. Our findings address the existing knowledge gap regarding the impact of physicochemical factors on the transport of the next-generation, multifunctional RGO-metal oxide nanohybrids in the subsurface.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:03/27/2018
Record Last Revised:06/04/2020
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 344208