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High adsorption of sulfamethoxazole by an amine-modified polystyrene-divinylbenzene resin and its mechanistic insight Chen Ling, Xiaoyun Li, Zhiyun Zhang, Fuqiang Liu, Yingqing Deng, Xiao-Peng Zhang, Aimin Li, Lili He, and Baoshan Xing Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b02846 • Publication Date (Web): 30 Aug 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 4, 2016
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High adsorption of sulfamethoxazole by an amine-modified polystyrene-divinylbenzene resin and its mechanistic insight Chen Ling1,2, Xiaoyun Li2, 3, Zhiyun Zhang4, Fuqiang Liu*,1, Yingqing Deng2, Xiaopeng Zhang1, Aimin Li1, Lili He4, Baoshan Xing*,2 1
State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, School of the Environment,
Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, P. R. China 2
Stockbridge School of Agriculture, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003,
United States 3
College of Tourism and Environment, Shaanxi Normal University, Xi'an, Shaanxi 710119, P. R.
China 4
Department of Food Science, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003,
United States
1
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ABSTRACT
2
Sulfamethoxazole
3
polystyrene-divinylbenzene resins (PSA/B/C/D) was investigated. All resins showed a
4
similar pH dependent adsorption of SMZ but their capacities were linearly related
5
with the contents of primary amines (-NH2) rather than secondary amines (-NH-).
6
Mechanisms of SMZ adsorption by PSA (highest -NH2 content) were discussed as an
7
example. Due to comparable pKa, H-bonding interactions of -NH20 with SMZ0
8
(regular H-bond) and SMZ- (negative charge-assisted H-bond, (-)CAHB) successively
9
contributed most adsorption (pH 4~9). At weakly acidic pH, -NH20 was partially
10
protonated and electrostatic attraction between -NH3+ and SMZ- occurred
11
concurrently, but could be hindered by increased loading of SMZ0. Hydrophobic/ π-π
12
interactions were not major mechanisms as phenanthrene and nitrobenzenes had little
13
effect on SMZ adsorption. At alkaline pH, where SMZ- and -NH20 prevailed,
14
adsorption was accompanied by the stoichiometric (~1.0) proton exchange with water,
15
leading to OH- release and the formation of (-)CAHB [SO2N-…H…NH2]. The
16
interaction and SMZ spatial distribution in resin-phase were further confirmed by
17
FTIR and Raman spectra. SMZ was uniformly adsorbed on external and interior
18
surfaces. SMZ adsorption by PSA had low-interference from other coexistent matter,
19
but high stability after multiple regenerations. The findings will guide new adsorbent
20
designs for selectively removing target organics.
(SMZ)
adsorption
by
a
series
2
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1. INTRODUCTION
22
Continuous release of antibiotics to natural aquatic systems has raised increasing
23
concern in the last decade because these compounds are not readily biodegradable,
24
impact microbial ecosystems and may result in bacterial resistance proliferation1-4.
25
Based on a survey in 2013, 92,700 tons of 36 commonly used antibiotics were
26
produced for human and animal use in China, of which, approximately 53,800 tons
27
eventually ended up in the environment through various pathways5. Although
28
conventional biological wastewater treatment processes can remove some antibiotics,
29
many of them have been reported to be at concentrations of 10~1000 ng/L upon
30
discharge6, 7. Also, many countries tend to reuse wastewater for soil irrigation,
31
resulting in more antibiotics detected worldwide in surface water as well as ground
32
water8. Therefore, advanced treatment and remediation of water resources are
33
urgently needed9, 10.
34
Adsorption is one of the most reported technologies for the removal of antibiotics
35
from water because it is simple, green, and the adsorbents can be reused. Most
36
antibiotics are polar compounds with both hydrophobic and hydrophilic parts. Thus,
37
various adsorbents have been developed to remove antibiotics that rely on van der
38
Waals, hydrophobic, and electrostatic interactions11-14. Many of these materials
39
encountered lower selectivity and their adsorption decreased significantly in the
40
presence of coexisting substances such as natural organic compounds and inorganic
41
ions. Therefore, to achieve high adsorption capacity and selectivity, it is critical to
42
design more specific interaction sites tailored to remove specific antibiotics, which 3
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has to date been rarely reported15-17.
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Hydrogen (H-) bonding is one highly selective interaction contributing to the
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adsorption of weak organic acids (WOAs, including many antibiotics) from water to
46
adsorbents when WOA-adsorbent H-bonds overcome the competition from
47
WOA-water and water-adsorbent H-bonds18, 19. Recently several studies reported
48
that amines enriched materials showed superior adsorption to WOAs from aqueous
49
phase and all proposed that H-bonding interaction played an important role in the
50
adsorption. Suriyanon et al. studied the adsorption of acetaminophen (ACT) onto an
51
amine-functionalized silica-based material (A-HMS). They speculated H-bonding
52
between positively charged amine (-NH3+) and hydroxyl of acetaminophen20.
53
However, partial deprotonation of -NH3+ and distribution of amine species were not
54
considered and the functional groups participating in H-bonding interaction were not
55
specified, as both ACT and A-HMS contained various groups with H-bonding ability.
56
Similarly, Zhou et al. investigated the role of H-bonding sites in the adsorption of
57
bisphenol A, but the adsorption sites (hydroxyl and/or secondary amines) were not
58
confirmed21. Chen et al. examined the mechanisms of p-nitrophenol (PNP)
59
adsorption onto a tetraethylenepentamine tailed resin at pH 5 through the
60
competition of Cu(II) adsorption, which was expected to coordinate with amine
61
groups, however whether all amine groups were available as sites for PNP
62
adsorption as well as the adsorption mechanisms at pH>5 are still unknown22. At
63
environmentally relevant pHs, many antibiotics are partly dissociated and present as
64
neutral molecules and anions. Several studies have showed an exceptionally strong 4
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H-bond (e.g. negative charge-assisted H-bond, (-)CAHB) formed between anionic
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sulfamethazine, phthalic acid, or naphthenic acids and surface carboxyl/ hydroxyl
67
groups23-25, however, little is known about (-)CAHB in regard to surface amine
68
groups with H acceptor ability. Therefore, the preferred amine groups (i.e. among
69
primary, secondary and tertiary amines), the structure-affinity relationship for
70
antibiotic adsorption, and the contribution of H-bonding to the overall adsorption at
71
different pH still need to be explored as the information is vital to guide how to
72
design adsorbents and their applications in the removal of specific antibiotic
73
families.
74
In this work, we focused on the adsorption of sulfamethoxazole (SMZ) onto
75
resins containing abundant amines (primary and secondary amines). SMZ was
76
selected as a model antibiotic because it is a representative sulfonamide antibiotic
77
widely used and frequently detected in groundwater in China, USA and Europe.5, 9, 26.
78
Moreover, SMZ in water exists as a cation (SMZ+), neutral molecule (SMZ0) and as
79
an anion (SMZ-) due to the protonation of the aromatic amine (-NH3+-, pKa≈1.7)
80
and the dissociation of sulfonamide group (-SO2NH-, pKa≈5.7)23. Specifically, we
81
hypothesize that H-bonding interactions between the neutral -SO2NH- group
82
(H-donor) and the surface neutral primary amine (-NH2, H-acceptor) contribute to
83
the majority of SMZ adsorption at pH≤5.7. Also, at higher pH, (-)CAHB interactions
84
between the anionic -SO2N-- group and the surface neutral -NH2 (pKa-NH3+→-NH2
85
=3.5~7.1 for different linear unsubstituted polyamines) may occur as their pKas are
86
comparable. The results of this study will provide new information for adsorbent 5
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designs and their applications in the efficient removal of antibiotics from waters.
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2. MATERIALS AND METHODS
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2.1. Materials
90
Four resins with amine
91
polystyrene-divinylbenzene resin by reacting the resin with either ethylenediamine,
92
diethylenetriamine, triethylenetetramine or tetraethylenepentamine (the details are
93
shown in Figure S1 in the Supporting Information, SI), and were named as PSA, PSB,
94
PSC and PSD, respectively, based on their incremental amine chain length. Four
95
sulfonamides including sulfamethoxazole (SMZ), sulfadiazine (SFZ), sulfamethazine
96
(SMT) and sulfapyridine (SFD) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich with a purity of
97
99% and used as received.
98
from American Radiolabeled Chemicals, Inc. and the other reagents were all
99
analytical grade purchased from Fisher Scientific. The typical properties of all
100
adsorbents and adsorbates used in this study are listed in Table S1 and Table S2 in the
101
SI.
102
2.2. Adsorption experiments
103
Adsorption was conducted using the established batch techniques detailed in the SI.
104
Briefly, in order to avoid pH buffering by the resin, the desired amount of resin (10.0
105
mg) was first pre-wetted using 20 mL of ultrapure water (pre-adjusted to a desired pH)
106
for 24h at 298±1 K followed by the addition of 20 mL of the adsorbate solution at the
107
same pH as the equilibrium solution pH in the pre-wetting stage. The adsorption was
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processed for another 72 h, which was the reaction time found to be required to reach
groups were
14
synthesized from chloromethylated
C labeled (S. A. 77 mCi/mmol) SMZ was purchased
6
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adsorption equilibrium from the prior kinetic experiments (Figure S2). Liquid-phase
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composition is specified in each figure. After phase separation, SMZ concentration
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with a 14C-labeled was determined in the supernatant by liquid scintillation counting.
112
Other solutes of interest (organic and inorganic compounds) were detected by UV
113
spectrophotometer or ion chromatography (details in the SI, Table S3). The
114
equilibrium pH was also measured. There was no significant loss of solutes to
115
degradation or adsorption onto vial walls.
116
2.3. Data Analysis
117
The equilibrium adsorption amount (Qe µmol/g) was calculated using Eq.1. Three
118
typical isotherm models were used to fit the adsorption data. Mean weighted squared
119
error (MWSE) was calculated by Eq.2. ( − ) ⋯ ( . 1)
!"# (): = 1 + =
)
%&ℎ (%): = ( * Dubinin − Ashtakhow model (DAM): log = − (>/ )@ O
1 AB = D[(FGHIJK − FLKM )N / FGHIJK N ] … ( . 2) C PQ)
120
where, C0 and Ce (µmol/L) are the initial and equilibrium dissolved concentrations,
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respectively. The m (g) is the mass of resin, V (L) is the volume of the adsorbate
122
solution. Qmax and Q0 (µmol/g) are the maximum adsorption capacities for LM and
123
DAM, respectively. KL (L/µmol) and Kf represent the adsorption affinity parameters
124
of LM and FM, respectively. The n is the Freundlich isotherm constant. The >(kJ/mol)
125
= RT ln (Cs/Ce) is the effective adsorption potential, where Cs (µmol/L) is the water 7
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solubility of the compound at the tested pH, R is the universal gas constant
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[8.314×10-3 kJ/(mol·K)] and T (K) is the absolute temperature. E [kJ/mol] is the
128
“correlating divisor” of >. The b is the DAM fitting parameter. Both E and b are
129
related to the adsorption affinity of organic compounds. MWSE and the correlation
130
coefficient (r2) were used to evaluate the goodness of fit on the data. X is the number
131
of observations and C is the degree of freedom (X-2 for LM and FM, X-3 for DAM).
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Qmeasured and Qmodel are the measured and model-estimated equilibrium adsorption
133
amount, respectively. Statistical analysis was conducted using the commercial
134
software programs (Microsoft excel 2013, Origin 8.0 and R version 3.2.4).
135
2.4. Characterization techniques
136
The elemental content of the whole resin (WR) and the resin external surface (ES)
137
were examined by elemental analyzer (CHN-O-Rapid, Germany) and X-ray
138
photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS, PHI 5000 VersaProbe, Japan), respectively. The
139
speciation of surface amines and SMZ was analyzed by theoretical calculation from
140
Visual MINTEQ (ver. 3.0, USA). Solid-state IR spectra (KBr pellets) in the region of
141
2000~500 cm-1 were recorded on a VERTEX 80 v fourier transform infrared
142
spectrometer (Bruker, Germany). A DXR Raman microscope (Thermo Fisher
143
Scientific, Madison, WI., U.S.A.) with a 633 nm laser and 10×, 20× confocal
144
microscope objectives were used in this study. Each spectrum was scanned from 3400
145
to 400 cm-1 with 8 mW laser power and 2 s exposure time. Raman maps were
146
integrated based on the characteristic peaks in the Raman spectra using OMINC
147
software (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Raman mapping was completed with a 50 µm 8
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pinhole aperture to control the confocal depths. The step size in the X and Z directions
149
was both 10 µm, and each image contained 64 spots.
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3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
151
3.1. Influence of pH and the adsorption isotherms at the optimal pH
152
SMZ adsorption onto the four resins reached the maximum at pH 4.5-6.0 and
153
decreased on either side of this range (Figure1A). Generally, the order in adsorption
154
amount was PSA>PSB>PSC>PSD. The adsorption isotherm of SMZ at an optimal pH
155
(5.5) was conducted to compare the adsorption capacities of different resins (Figure
156
1B). DAM fit better than LM or FM with lower MWSE values and higher correlation
157
coefficients (r2). The fitting parameters are presented in Table S4. Consistently, From
158
PSA to PSD, their Q0 values gradually decreased by 25.8%. However, the affinity
159
indexes (E and b values) were relatively stable ( pHe1 at pHe>5 10
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(meaning OH- was released or H+ was adsorbed due to the interaction between SMZ
193
and resin at pHe>5). The two stages indicate different adsorption mechanisms.
194
Considering the environmentally-relevant pH range of water is 4.0~9.0, the
195
adsorption of SMZ at pH around 4.5, 6.0 and 8.5 was particularly studied.
196
3.2.1. pH around 4.5
197
At pH 4.5, SMZ0 (95%) and SMZ- (5%) make up the total SMZ in solution, while
198
the amine groups of PSA are comprised of -NH20 (25%) and -NH3+ (75%). Possible
199
dominating interactions between PSA and SMZ are listed below20, 27, 28. UVWXY + BZ [ = UVWXY ∙ BZ [ (1) Electrostatic attraction UVWXY + BZ = UVWXY ⋯ BZ (2) H − Bonding interaction UVWN + BZ = UVWN ⋯ BZ (3) H − Bonding interaction U + SMZ = U∎BZ (4) Non − specific interaction
200
M2 is excluded from the predominant mechanisms because the adsorption amount
201
of SMZ clearly decreased with the increase of both -NH3+ and SMZ0 at a pH range
202
from 5 to 3 (see Figure 1A and Figure 2). Moreover, if M1 is thought to be a
203
significant mechanism for SMZ adsorption at pH 4.5, part of the SMZ0 in the solution
204
was expected to dissociate to form SMZ- with the release of H+, as more than 70%
205
SMZ was adsorbed onto the resin-phase. However, Figure 2C shows no pH decrease
206
due to the adsorption of SMZ at a pH lower than 5, arguing against M1 as a leading
207
contribution of SMZ adsorption onto PSA.
208
Some non-specific interactions (M4), especially hydrophobic effects (HPO) and
209
π-π electron donor-acceptor (EDA) interactions between carbonaceous sorbents and 11
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aromatic compounds have been frequently mentioned in previous literature29-31. A
211
large amount of alkane/ benzene carbon (>60%) in the matrix and the amine chain of
212
PSA is regarded as hydrophobic sites. The contribution of HPO between SMZ and
213
PSA at pH 4.5 was tested with the competition of phenanthrene (PHE) which is much
214
more hydrophobic than SMZ as reflected in its logKow (log-transformed octanol-water
215
distribution coefficient, Table S2). π-π EDA interactions occurs when two oppositely
216
polarized quadrapoles of benzene rings approach each other23, 32. SMZ could be a
217
π-acceptor due to the high electronegativity of the -SO2NH- group, while the
218
polystyrene-divinylbenzene matrix has a π-donor ability27,
219
interactions between SMZ and PSA, the competitive effect of two strong π-acceptor
220
compounds: 1,3-dinitrobenzene (DNB) and 2,4-dinitrotoluene (DNT) on SMZ
221
adsorption was studied
222
co-presence of the three uncharged competitors exerted very little inhibition (smaller
223
than 3%) on SMZ adsorption by PSA. Moreover, the adsorption strength based on
224
Ce-normalized adsorption amount was in the order PHE>SMZ>>DNT>DNB in both
225
single-solute and bi-solutes adsorption systems. Hence, the role of HPO and π-π EDA
226
interactions for SMZ adsorption within this pH range was not important. Compared
227
with the high adsorption potentials of carbon nanotubes (CNTs), biochars and
228
hypercrosslinked resin (hundreds m2/g)23, 36, 37, PSA (maximum 26.73 m2/g) probably
229
does not have enough HPO area to make sufficient contact with SMZ (polar: nonpolar
230
surface area ratio=1:3, see Table S1 and S2), yielding a much lower adsorption
231
capacity.
33
. To test π-π EDA
34, 35
. As shown in Table S6 and Figure S7 in the SI, the
12
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Based on the above discussion, we propose that H-bonding interaction (M3) is the
233
predominant mechanism for SMZ adsorption at pH 4.5 and occurred between
234
sulfonamide (-SO2NH-, with H-bond donor ability αm=1.15) and the neutral primary
235
amine (-NH2, with H-bond acceptor ability βm=0.6)38, 39. H-bond strength gradually
236
increases as the difference of donor-acceptor proton affinities (∆PA) or acidic
237
constants (∆pKa) decreases40. We compared the adsorption of SMZ along with three
238
other sulfonamide compounds with different pKa values (see Table S2) because of the
239
different heterocyclic rings. Note that >95% of each compound is in its neutral form
240
at pH 4.5. If M3 predominantly contributed to the adsorption mechanisms, the affinity
241
of the four compounds to PSA would increase from SMZ, SFZ, SMT to SFD due to a
242
smaller ∆pKa between resin primary amines (pKa,resin ~5.0) and -SO2NH- groups (pKa,
243
solute,
244
initial concentration, the adsorption amount was as expected and in the order of SMZ>
245
SFZ> SMT> SFD. Moreover, the affinity indexes (KL in LM, Kf in FM and E, b in
246
DAM, Table S7) all show a linear relationship with the ratio of acid dissociation
247
constants of the solute -SO2NH- groups and the resin primary amines (Ka, solute/ Ka, resin,
248
equal to 10-∆pKa) (r2>0.94), which strongly demonstrates the predominant role of M3
249
in SMZ adsorption.
SMZ 5.7< SFZ 6.3< SMT 7.4< SFD 8.6). Figure S8 shows that for the same
250
3.2.2. pH around 6.0
251
PSA had the highest adsorption strength of SMZ at a pH around 6.0 where SMZ is
252
~60% anionic while ~80% of the primary amines in PSA are in neutral form. Similar
253
to the case at an initial pH of 4.5, M1 and M3 could be concurrent mechanisms. The 13
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apparent adsorption of SMZ0 and SMZ- was calculated using Visual MINTEQ based
255
on the concentration of total SMZ and solution pH (initial and equilibrium).
256
Adsorption at initial pH 5.3 and pH 6.1 are compared in Figure 3. DAM fits the
257
adsorption isotherm much better than LM and FM with the lowest MWSE values and
258
highest correlation coefficient (r2) (Table S8). The affinity indexes (E and b in DAM)
259
for SMZ0 increased while those for SMZ- decreased with rising initial pH, which
260
agrees with the speculation that the available -NH20 sites increased while the available
261
-NH3+ sites reduced at a higher pH. This was also examined by the higher adsorption
262
amount of the structural analogue, 4-aminobenzenesulfonic ions (ABS-, pKa,ABS→
263
ABS-=-3.39)
264
that SMZ- apparent adsorption at the initial pH of 5.3 approached saturation at its
265
equilibrium concentration of 200 µmol/L, while SMZ- adsorption at the initial pH of
266
6.1 kept increasing with the increase in SMZ- equilibrium concentration. The earlier
267
saturation of SMZ- loading at a lower pH is probably caused by the steric hindrance of
268
the loading of SMZ0. Overall, at a total SMZ concentration lower than 50 µmol/L,
269
both SMZ0 and SMZ- were almost completely adsorbed by PSA at the same ratio of
270
their concentrations in solution (1.7 at pH 5.3 and 0.45 at pH 6.1). With total SMZ
271
concentration increasing, the ratio of the SMZ0 and SMZ- adsorption amount kept
272
rising to 3.3 at the initial pH 5.3 or 1.3 for the initial pH 6.1. The preference of SMZ0
273
adsorption onto PSA indicates that H-bonding (M3) is likely the predominant
274
mechanism occurring rather than electrostatic attractions (M1).
275
at pH 5.3 than at pH 6.1 (Figure S9). On the other hand, it is noteworthy
3.2.3. pH around 8.5 14
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At the initial pH of 8.5, SMZ- reaches the maximum percentage of total SMZ
277
adsorption (>99.5) while the primary amines in the resin are totally -NH20. Since the
278
hydrophobic and π-π EDA interactions (M4) are very weak at low pH where SMZ0
279
(logKow ~0.79) is the predominant species, M4 will be further weakened with the
280
decrease of solute hydrophobicity (logKow ~0.06) at a much higher pH36. The clear
281
adsorption of SMZ- at this pH range as shown in Figure 1A is expected to be
282
contributed to electrostatic interactions or anion exchange (M1) because most of the
283
secondary amines are still positively charged (>80%) at pH 8~9. SMZ- adsorption was
284
conducted under various solute conditions with one or more cosolutes including
285
H2PO4- and SO42- (the molar ratio cosolute to SMZ was 103~104), assuming that high
286
concentrations of inorganic anions (especially divalent SO42-) could strongly compete
287
for most of the M1 sites30. As shown in Figure 4A, SMZ adsorption at pH 8.5
288
declined
289
SMZ+H2PO4-+SO42- three-solutes system. The adsorption amount was basically stable
290
when more SO42- was added to the adsorption system, suggesting that only around 12%
291
SMZ adsorption is attributed to M1. On the other hand, the weaker adsorption of
292
H2PO4-, SO42- and the structural analogue, ABS- than SMZ- in the single-solute system
293
at the same initial pH 8.5 again demonstrates M1 is present, but not critical at this pH
294
range. More importantly, since M1~M4 were all ruled out, the major adsorption
295
(~88 %) of SMZ- must be only driven by a different mechanism.
with
increasing
coexistent
inorganic
anions,
by
11.7%
in
296
A special H-bond called negative charge-assisted H-bond, (-)CAHB, is a subset
297
of low barrier hydrogen bond and generally recognized as occurring in the 15
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liquid-phase when the H-donor and acceptor have similar acidic constants (∆pKa=
299
pKa, H-donor−pKa, H-donor≤ ~4) 40. Moreover, the strength of (-)CAHB increases with
300
decreasing ∆pKa. Here, ∆pKa between H-donor (-SO2N--) and acceptor (-NH20) is
301
only ~0.6. Therefore, we assume that (-)CAHB may occur between SMZ- and the
302
surface –NH20 sites accompanying with the proton exchange of SMZ- with water, as
303
described by the following equations: BZ [ + WN j = BZ + jW[ (kl m&ℎ) UVWN + BZ = UVWN ⋯ BZ (W − n l&l)
304
That is, UVWN + BZ [ + WN j = [UVWN ⋯ W Y ⋯ BZ [ ] + jW[ ((−)oWp, 5)
305
(-)CAHB was previously reported to form between anionic sulfamethazine or
306
carboxylates and the surface carboxyl or hydroxyl groups of biochars and CNTs,
307
accompanied by the release of OH- in a stoichiometry of up to 1.0 for the monobasic
308
acid19, 23, 41.
309
To examine our hypothesis, the adsorption isotherm of SMZ (SMZ-) and the
310
buffering capability of PSA were studied at the same initial pH 9.0 (Figure 4B). It
311
revealed that OH- was released due to SMZ- adsorption: as the total loading of SMZ
312
(all species) went up from 0 to 550 µmol/g, the solution equilibrium pH clearly
313
increased from 7.02 to 8.68, while the pH in the corresponding controls without PSA
314
remained unchanged. Considering PSA would keep buffering the solution pH during
315
the entire adsorption process, the stoichiometry of OH- release was estimated by
316
summing the moles of OH- that appeared in the solution and the moles of OH-
317
consumed by PSA at the same pH due to its buffering capability. The stoichiometry 16
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reaches a maximum of 0.96 and decreases with the increase of SMZ loading. The
319
decline in stoichiometry probably resulted from the increase in SMZ adsorption that
320
was contributed by other mechanisms. In the case of the energy conservation, the
321
standard free energy of proton exchange is estimated by ∆tu v #wx = UylnG,HLMIz −
322
UylnG,{GzJ = −32.52 − (−79.88) = +47.35 kJ/mol, where Ka,
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are the acid dissociation constants of SMZ and water, respectively. To account for the
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adsorption of SMZ- onto the PSA surface, the energy demand of proton exchange has
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to be compensated for by the free energy (∆t([)u ) of (-)CAHB [SO2N-…H…NH2]
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formation. Although to date the latter can be only estimated as the range from about
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-56 kJ/mol for hydrogen dicarboxylate conjugate pairs, [RCO2⋯H⋯O2CR]- (∆pKa
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~0), to -50.2 kJ/mol for the acetate/phenol pair, [C6H5O⋯H⋯O2CCH3]- (∆pKa ~5.2)19,
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23
330
stoichiometry and energy compensation strongly support the formation of (-)CAHB as
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contributing to the majority of SMZ- adsorption at alkaline pH. In essence, the
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apparent acidity constant of the adsorbed SMZ (pKa, ads) onto PSA increased to 7.5
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compared with that of aqueous SMZ (pKa2, 5.7) (see Figure 4B), which facilitates the
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H-bonding between SMZ and PSA at a wider pH range. As the initial pH increased,
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proton exchange of SMZ- became energetically costlier at a faster pace due to the
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suppression by the high OH- concentration. Thus, SMZ- adsorption and OH- release
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declined sharply to ~zero at initial pH >11 (Table S9).
solute
and Ka,
water
, ∆t([)u is enough to compensate for ∆tu v #wx . Therefore, OH- release
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3.2.4. Confirmation of adsorption sites and SMZ spatial distribution in PSA
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FTIR spectra of fresh PSA, SMZ loaded PSA (PSA+SMZ) and pure SMZ are 17
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shown in Figure 5A. The peak at 1571 cm-1 in the spectra of PSA is assigned to the
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stretching vibrations of -NH242-44. The peak almost disappears in the PSA+SMZ
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spectrum, confirming that -NH2 participated in the adsorption. Spectra comparison of
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SMZ and PSA+SMZ showed an obvious shift in the vibration of S-N bond (SMZ:
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928 cm-1; PSA+SMZ: 943 cm-1), while the stretching vibration of aromatic –NH2 at
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1500 cm-1 and 1595 cm-1 remained unchanged45, 46. All the information supports the
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H-bonding interaction between the sulfonamide group and the primary amine.
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To further investigate the spatial distribution of SMZ in the whole resin, the
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Raman spectra of PSA and PSA+SMZ cross-sections at 0, 10, 50, 100 µm from the
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external surface were obtained in Figure 5B. For PSA, peaks at 1610 cm-1 and 1575
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cm-1 were assigned to the bending stretching of –NH2 scissors which were strongly
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detected at all inner cross-sections of PSA47. As to PSA+SMZ spectra, there were
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many new peaks at 1600 cm-1, 1026 cm-1, 1122 cm-1 and 950 cm-1, specifically
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corresponding to the vibration of amine (at the benzene ring), isoxazole ring and two
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symmetric stretching of the sulphonyl group, respectively45-47. Their presence at each
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cross-section directly proves that SMZ has diffused into the interior surface. Also,
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similar to the results in FTIR, the amine peak at 1575 cm-1 disappeared in all spectra
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of PSA+SMZ, which is consistent with the involvement of primary amines in SMZ
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adsorption.
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We remain curious as to whether SMZ adsorption would be hindered during the
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diffusion. Raman signal intensity is reduced with the increasing access depth of the
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laser. For every 64 detection spots in each cross-section, the intensity of guest -SO2 18
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peak at 1122 cm-1 was normalized by the intensity of the resin-intrinsic benzene peak
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at 641 cm-1, alkane peak at 1455 cm-1 and –NH2 peak at 1610 cm-1, with the averaged
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values reported in Table S10. Values of I-SO2 (S) /I-alkane (R) and I-SO2 (S) /I-benzene (R) showed
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a slight increase with increasing depth, indicating that the concentration of SMZ in the
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resin-phase is basically uniform from the external surface towards the interior surface.
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The unhindered diffusion is probably attributed to the large pore structure of PSA as
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shown in the SEM image (Figure S10A). More importantly, values of I-SO2 (S)/ I-NH2(R)
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were relatively stable around at 0.9 for all detection spots, suggesting that more SMZ
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was detected where more primary amines were grafted onto the resin (Figure S10B,
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C), again supporting that primary amines are the predominant sites for SMZ
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adsorption.
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All the data were consistent with our hypothesis. Primary amines were the most
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important sites for SMZ adsorption. The proposed adsorption mechanisms of SMZ
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onto PSA surface at different pH ranges are illustrated in Figure 6. For a given initial
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concentration (e.g. 250 µmol/L), SMZ could be progressively adsorbed first through
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regular H-bond (M3) and charge pairing with primary amines (M1a) in a mole ratio of
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46:6 at pHe~4.5, and 60:35 at pHe~6.0. Then adsorption through (-)CAHB with
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primary amines (M5) and charge pairing with secondary amines (M1b) in a ratio of
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34:4 at pHe~8.5 likely occurs, accompanied by proton exchange with water in the
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aqueous phase. Not shown are non-specific interactions which may operate in all
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cases, but not dominantly. All of the interactions could freely occur at the external and
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interior surfaces where the corresponding sites are present. 19
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3.3. Practical application and environmental implication
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As SMZ adsorption onto PSA predominantly relies on the H-bonding interactions,
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the low susceptibility of SMZ adsorption onto PSA resin is expected in the aqueous
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phase where other concurrent substances such as inorganic ions and natural organic
388
matters (NOM) occur. Figure S11 shows the impact of coexisting substances on the
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adsorption of SMZ by PSA along with another two commonly used adsorbents (anion
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exchange resin, D201 and activated carbon, AC, see Table S1)48, 49. A small decrease
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(