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Effects of polyamide microplastic on the transport of graphene oxide in porous media
Summary
Researchers used Extended Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (XDLVO) theory and column experiments to investigate how polyamide microplastics influence the transport of graphene oxide through saturated porous media, finding that polyamide presence, flow rate, ionic strength, and ionic type all significantly affected graphene oxide migration behaviour.
With the rapid development of the nano-material and chemical industry, more and more microplastic (MP) and nano-material were discharged into the environment. In this study, a two-dimensional (2D) surface of Extended Darjaguin-Landau-Verwe-Overbeek (XDLVO) is proposed to quantitatively investigate the effect of polyamide (PA) on the transport of graphene oxide (GO) in porous media. The influences of mass fraction of PA, flow rate, GO concentration, ionic type and strength on the migration of GO in saturated porous media are investigated by column experiments and numerical models. The two-dimensional (2D) surfaces of XDLVO interaction energy between GO and GO, GO and QS, GO and PA, are firstly calculated to analyze the transport of GO in saturated porous media. Experimental results suggest the mobility of GO is enhanced when flow velocity and initial concentration of GO are increased. However, the mobility of GO is inhibited when the mass fraction of PA and ionic strength are increased. More important, the inhibitory effect of divalent cations on GO migration is stronger than that of monovalent cations. Simultaneously, XDLVO results suggest that ionic types and strengths are important factors affecting the mobility of GO in porous media, and the critical ionic strength is observed from the continuous variation of the secondary minimum trap of XDLVO interaction energy. Model results show that there is a linear relationship between the logarithm of the secondary minimum trap of XDLVO interaction energy and the parameters related to GO mobility, which suggests XDLVO energy surface has an important application significance in the accurate quantification of GO mobility in porous media. These findings contribute to GO transport affected by microplastic in porous media, thus laying a significant foundation for the environmental risk and contamination remediation.
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