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  • articleNo Access

    ARSENIC ADSORPTION FROM WATER USING GRAPHENE-BASED MATERIALS AS ADSORBENTS: A CRITICAL REVIEW

    Adsorption is widely applied to remove arsenic from water. This paper reviewed and compared the recent progresses on the arsenic removal by adsorption using two-dimensional and three-dimensional graphene-based materials as adsorbents. Functional graphene sheet achieved the largest As(III) adsorption capacity of 138.79mg/g, while Mg-Al LDH/GO2 showed the largest As(V) adsorption capacity of 183.11mg/g. Parameters including pH, temperature, co-existing ions and loaded metal or metal oxide affected the adsorption process. The adsorption mechanisms of graphene-based materials for As(III) and As(V) could be explained by surface complexation and the electrostatic attraction, respectively. Future works are suggested to focus on regenerating of two-dimensional graphene-based adsorbents and developing the three-dimensional with large specific surface area and better adsorption performance.

  • articleNo Access

    Recent developments in the coordination chemistry of porphyrin complexes containing non-metallic and semi-metallic elements

    Recent advances in the chemistry of main group porphyrin complexes are surveyed. New, unprecedented structural types for porphyrin complexes which have been revealed from the recent reports of boron and tellurium porphyrins are described. Advances in the preparation and reactivity of Group 14 (silicon and tin) and Group 15 porphyrin complexes are discussed. A systematic variation in the out-of-plane distortion (ruffling) of light element Group 14 and 15 porphyrin complexes has become apparent now that a significant number of structurally characterized examples are at hand.

  • articleNo Access

    On concentration dependence of arsenic diffusivity in silicon

    An analysis of the equations used for modeling thermal arsenic diffusion in silicon has been carried out. It was shown that for arsenic diffusion governed by the vacancy-impurity pairs and the pairs formed due to interaction of impurity atoms with silicon self-interstitials in a neutral charge state, the doping process can be described by the Fick’s second law equation with a single effective diffusion coefficient which takes into account two impurity flows arising due to interaction of arsenic atoms with vacancies and silicon self-interstitials, respectively. Arsenic concentration profiles calculated with the use of the effective diffusivity agree well with experimental data if the maximal impurity concentration is near the intrinsic carrier concentration. On the other hand, for higher impurity concentrations a certain deviation in the local regions of arsenic distribution is observed. The difference from the experiment can occur due to the incorrect use of effective diffusivity for the description of two different impurity flows or due to the formation of nonuniform distributions of neutral vacancies and neutral self-interstitials in heavily doped silicon layers. We also suppose that the migration of nonequilibrium arsenic interstitial atoms makes a significant contribution to the formation of a low concentration region on thermal arsenic diffusion.

  • chapterNo Access

    9: Fossil Carbon: A Source of Medicines

      Man has always used his environment to heal himself. Until 1869 all medicines came mainly from plants (e.g. opium for pain relief, Figure 8.46, Section 8.8.1) or animals (e.g. badger skin and meat to relieve snake or scorpion bites). In 2010, there were 1000 active ingredients in drugs sold in pharmacies, of which 10% were unmodified natural products, 29% were derivatives of natural products (hemisynthesis) and 61% were synthetic products. Using bio-informatics and artificial intelligence methods, an estimated 166 billion different molecules can be prepared by combining 17 atoms comprising C, N, O, S, F, Cl, Br and I, and by applying known synthesis methods and standard stability criteria. By applying medicinal chemistry criteria (structure/biological activity relationships) to this molecular space called GBD17, it is estimated that 10 million of these molecules could become drugs…

    • chapterNo Access

      Microstructure and compound developed from the Fe-Ce-As at 1323K

      The Arsenic in steel commonly comes from a certain amount of iron ore but it is difficult to remove them in the iron and steelmaking process because its oxidation potential is lower than that of Iron. In this study, a certain amount of rare earth metal, Cerium and a metal with low melting point, Arsenic were closed in the barrel-shaped cylinder machine by H08 steel, heated to 1323K for 50 hours. Interaction among the cerium, arsenic and iron in the barrel-shaped cylinder were studied by X-ray diffraction, optical microscopy, and electronic probe microscopy analysis. The result shows that the ternary compound Ce12Fe57.5As41 can be developed at 1323K when the atomic ratio of Cerium to Arsenic is 1:3. The binary compound CeAs is the main product at 1323K in the Fe-As-Ce system. The eutectic compound Fe2As can be precipitated from ferrite with the temperature decreasing.