A Study of the Transport of Different Size Silver Nanoparticles in Saturated Porous Media

WSU CORE Repository

 

A Study of the Transport of Different Size Silver Nanoparticles in Saturated Porous Media

Show simple item record

dc.contributor Pavel-Sizemore, Ioana
dc.contributor Dagher, Jessica M.
dc.contributor Kanel, Sushil R.
dc.contributor Goltz, Mark N.
dc.contributor.author Meyerhoefer, Allie
dc.date.accessioned 2012-05-21T16:16:46Z
dc.date.available 2012-05-21T16:16:46Z
dc.date.created 2012-04-13
dc.date.issued 2012-04-13
dc.identifier.other celebration_abstract12_meyerhoefer_a
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2374.WSU/6038
dc.description.abstract Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) have been increasingly applied in various nanotechnology areas due to their unique optical and antimicrobial properties that are absent in bulk form. With elevated release of AgNPs into the environment, their interaction with groundwater and soil needs to be examined. The goal of this study is to model the transport of colloidal AgNPs through water saturated porous media at low flow rates (1 mL/min), fixed pH (~8) and ionic strength (0.01 mM KCl), and for AgNP of diameters within the 1-100 nm range. The colloidal AgNPs were synthesized using a Creighton method and were size-selected using a tangential flow ultrafiltration approach. The physical and chemical properties of AgNPs (purity, shelf life time, average size, size distribution, aggregation state, surface plasmon resonance, concentration, and surface charge) were then determined via Raman spectroscopy, ultraviolet-visible absorption spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, and Zeta potential measurements. AgNPs (15 ppm of silver) and a conservative tracer (Cl- ions) were injected in upward direction through a one-dimensional column (2.5 cm diameter, 5.0 cm length) that was pre-packed with saturated glass beads. A 2 mL volume of effluent was collected every two minutes. The samples were chemically digested and diluted quantitatively with nitric acid. The concentration of silver in the colloids was determined using flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, and inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Breakthrough graphs were created by plotting the normalized concentration of total Ag versus the pore volume. The transport of AgNPs of 1-100 nm diameter size range showed no retardation with respect to the tracer, while a mass loss within the media pores was observed. More experiments will be performed in the future to verify the effect of colloidal AgNPs in heterogeneous porous media (sand and real soil).
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Wright State University en_US
dc.relation.ispartof Celebration of Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activities en_US
dc.rights.uri http://www.wright.edu/web/copyright.html
dc.subject Meyerhoefer, Allie en_US
dc.subject Pavel-Sizemore, Ioana en_US
dc.subject Dagher, Jessica M. en_US
dc.subject Kanel, Sushil R. en_US
dc.subject Goltz, Mark N. en_US
dc.subject Wright State University. College of Science and Mathematics. Department of Chemistry en_US
dc.title A Study of the Transport of Different Size Silver Nanoparticles in Saturated Porous Media en_US
dc.type Presentation en_US
dc.permissions World
dc.publisher.digital Digital Services Department, Wright State University Libraries en_US
dc.date.digitized 2012-04-13
dc.publisher.OLinstitution Wright State University en_US

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
celebration_abstract12_meyerhoefer_a.pdf 147.6Kb application/pdf Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search CORE


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account

About

Links