The role of carbon textile surface functionalities in reactive adsorption of vapor and liquid 2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfide: Evaluating interactions at the interface
Paola S. Pauletto, Dimitrios A. Giannakoudakis, Marc Florent, Teresa J. Bandosz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
A carbon textile (CT) was chemically modified to increase its surface activity and promote the adsorption and degradation of 2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfide (CEES) - a surrogate for mustard gas. CT was initially subjected to oxidation (CTO), and then heated under ammonia (CTON) or hydrogen sulfide (CTOS) atmosphere to incorporate nitrogen or sulfur functionalities, respectively. Detoxification experiments were performed in closed vials using either vapor or liquid forms of CEES. The maximum vapor weight uptakes on CT, CTO, CTOS, and CTON were 399, 372, 434, and 489 mg/g, respectively. All textiles were able to prevent the vaporization of CEES liquid droplets. Although similar reaction products were detected in both vapor and liquid systems, the marked differences in the extent of CEES chemical transformation on the surfaces of the textiles indicate distinct detoxification pathways influenced by surface chemistry. Even though the heterogeneous surface of CTO, enriched with oxygen surface groups, facilitated various reactions, hydrolysis was the predominant pathway. The thermal treatment, regardless of the atmosphere, reduced the oxygen content, decreasing the extent of hydrolysis. However, incorporating basic surface groups such as pyridines, amines, or weak acids such as thiols promoted dehydrohalogenation as the main detoxification pathway on these samples.
期刊介绍:
The journal Carbon is an international multidisciplinary forum for communicating scientific advances in the field of carbon materials. It reports new findings related to the formation, structure, properties, behaviors, and technological applications of carbons. Carbons are a broad class of ordered or disordered solid phases composed primarily of elemental carbon, including but not limited to carbon black, carbon fibers and filaments, carbon nanotubes, diamond and diamond-like carbon, fullerenes, glassy carbon, graphite, graphene, graphene-oxide, porous carbons, pyrolytic carbon, and other sp2 and non-sp2 hybridized carbon systems. Carbon is the companion title to the open access journal Carbon Trends. Relevant application areas for carbon materials include biology and medicine, catalysis, electronic, optoelectronic, spintronic, high-frequency, and photonic devices, energy storage and conversion systems, environmental applications and water treatment, smart materials and systems, and structural and thermal applications.