J Colloid Interface Sci
May 2010
This laboratory study mimicked the pollution of a suspension of silica beads, used as a crude model of sand, by naphthalene in mixture with carbofuran at first, and then by this mixture in association with a metal salt, Pb(NO(3))(2). The silica properties and the working conditions were such that they allowed us to only observe physisorption, which is the first and essential step of any adsorption mechanism. Naphthalene and carbofuran were, respectively, chosen as hydrocarbon and pesticide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper reports on investigations about the adsorption at the air-water surface, and for the sake of comparison at the silica-solution interface, of two 1-2 electrolytes, Pb(NO(3))(2) and PbCl(2), at first alone and then from a mixture with carbofuran or with benzene; all of them were at concentrations below 10(-2) M. The limited domain, where the Debye and Hückel formalism for solutions and the Wagner-Onsager-Samaras (WOS) model for surfaces are correct, is then respected. This study was aimed at trying to identify the part played in the surface by the different particles of the system components and in particular the role of water.
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