The objective of the study was to obtain a new biodegradable graft polymer by performing two chemical processes: first, a transesterification reaction between carboxylic acid’s salt and ethyl acrylate’s ester, followed by polymerization of the vinyl group from the ethyl acrylate monomer via free radicals. The copolymer’s FTIR shows an absence of ethyl bands, while the characteristic band of pyranose is maintained, which confirms the monomer’s graft. TGA analysis shows that sodium alginate had three decomposition temperatures: 103 °C due to dehydration, 212 °C associated with the destruction of glycosidic bonds, and 426 °C due to conversion of alginate into Na2CO3. The copolymer presents four processes at different temperatures, i.e., evaporation of alcohol at 65 °C, decomposition of ungrafted alginate at 220 °C, copolymer decomposition at 298 °C, and degradation of fragments into carbonate at 423 °C. The evaluation of the action of fungal growth on the copolymer was higher than 50%, which means it is an excellent material to be biodegraded.
Tridimensional cubic mesoporous silica, SBA-16, functionalized with aminopropyl groups, were employed as adsorbents for Pb2+ ion removal from aqueous solution. The adsorption capacity was investigated for the effect of pH, contact time, temperature, and concentration of 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane (APTES) employed for adsorbent functionalization. The textural properties and morphology of the adsorbents were evaluated by N2 physisorption, small-angle X-ray diffraction (XRD), diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (UV-vis), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The functionalization of the SBA-16 was evaluated by elemental analysis (N), thermogravimetric analysis (TG), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Batch adsorption studies show that the total Pb2+ ions removal was archived on adsorbent having an optimized amount of aminopropyl groups (2N-SBA-16). The maximum of Pb2+ ions removal occurred at optimized adsorption conditions: pH = 5–6, contact time 40 min, and at a low initial lead concentration in solution (200 mg L−1). Under the same adsorption conditions, the amino-functionalized SBA-16 with cubic 3D unit cell structure exhibited higher adsorption capability than its SBA-15 counterpart with uniform mesoporous channels.
In this work we report the effects of support structural properties and its modification with some metal oxides modifiers on the catalytic behavior of Au catalysts in the total CO oxidation at 20 °C. Au catalysts were supported on mesoporous silica materials (MSM) having different structural properties: Channel-like (SBA-15), cage-like (SBA-16), hexagonal (HMS), and disordered (DMS-1) structures. The effect of the modifier was evaluated by comparison of the catalytic response of the SBA-15-based catalysts modified with MgO, Fe2O3, TiO2, and CeO2. The chemical, structural, and electronic properties of the catalysts were investigated by a variety of techniques (metal content analysis by ICP-OES, N2 physisorption, XRD, UV-vis DRS, DRIFTS of adsorbed CO and OH regions, oxygen storage capacity (OSC), HR-TEM, and XPS). The activity of calcined catalysts in the CO oxidation reaction were evaluated at steady state conditions, at 20 °C, atmospheric pressure, and when using, as feed, a 1%CO/1%O2/98% gas mixture. The work clearly demonstrated that all Au catalysts supported on the mesoporous silicas modified with metal oxides were more active than the Au/SBA-15 and Au/MgO reference ones. The support structural properties and type of dopant were important factors influencing on the catalyst behavior. Concerning the support textural properties, it was found that the HMS substrate with the wormhole-structure offers better porosity and specific surface area than their silica counterparts having channel-like (SBA-15), cage-like (SBA-16), and disordered (DMS-1) mesoporous structures. Concerning the effect of modifier, the best catalytic response was achieved with the catalysts modified with MgO. After activation by calcination at 200 °C for 4 h, the Au/MgO/HMS catalyst exhibited the best catalytic performance, which was ascribed to the combined effects of the best structural properties, a large support oxygen storage capacity and homogeneous distribution of gold particles on the support (external and inner). Implications of the type of active sites (Au1+ or Au0), support structural properties and role of modifier on the catalytic activity are discussed.
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