Development of inexpensive adsorbents from industrial
wastes for the treatment of wastewaters is an important
area in environmental sciences. Blast furnace slag, dust and
sludge from steel plants, and carbon slurry from fertilizer
plants after their treatment have been utilized as inexpensive
adsorbents for the removal of phenols, which are an
important class of pollutants as they are highly toxic. The
characterization of the four adsorbents prepared has
shown that the carbonaceous adsorbent prepared from
carbon slurry possesses high porosity and maximum surface
area (380 m2/g) as compared to the other three adsorbents
(4−28 m2/g). The adsorption of four phenols (phenol,
2-chlorophenol, 4-chlorophenol, and 2,4-dichlorophenol)
on these adsorbents is parallel to their porosity and surface
area order. The uptake of the phenols on carbonaceous
adsorbent is substantial and found to be 17.2, 50.3, 57.4, and
132.5 mg/g for phenol, 2-chlorophenol, 4-chlorophenol,
and 2,4-dichlorophenol, respectively. The detailed adsorption
studies on carbonaceous adsorbent have indicated that
the adsorption process follows the Langmuir isotherm, is first
order, and is pore diffusion controlled. As adsorption of
phenols on prepared carbonaceous adsorbent is significant,
its performance has been evaluated with respect to
standard activated charcoal. The results indicate that the
phenols removal efficiency of carbonaceous adsorbent
is about 45% to that of a standard activated charcoal sample.
Thus, the carbonaceous adsorbent can be used for the
removal of phenols as a low-cost alternative (∼0.1
U.S.$/kg) to activated charcoal.
We tune the coordination environment of macrocyclic ligands to design two novel fluorescence sensors for Mn(2+). The BODIPY-based Mn(2+) sensor M1 affords an excellent, 52 fold, fluorescence 'turn-on' response despite the paramagnetic nature of Mn(2+). The lipophilic probe is cell-permeable and confocal imaging demonstrates that the sensor distinctly detects Mn(2+) within live cells.
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