Why Natural or Electron Irradiated Sheep Wool Show Anomalous Sorption of Higher Concentrations of Copper(II)
Sorption of higher concentrations of Cu(II) solution onto natural sheep wool or wool irradiated by an electron beam was studied. Sorption isotherms were of unexpected character, showing extremes. The samples with lower absorbed doses adsorbed less than non-irradiated wool, while higher doses led to...
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doaj-4c7c3953a34b4d27921d03a65c07c6882020-11-25T00:13:44ZengMDPI AGMolecules1420-30492018-12-012312318010.3390/molecules23123180molecules23123180Why Natural or Electron Irradiated Sheep Wool Show Anomalous Sorption of Higher Concentrations of Copper(II)Mária Porubská0Angela Kleinová1Peter Hybler2Jana Braniša3Constantine the Philosopher University in Nitra, Faculty of Natural Science, Department of Chemistry, Tr. A. Hlinku 1, 94974 Nitra, SlovakiaPolymer Institute, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Dúbravská cesta 9, 84541 Bratislava 45, SlovakiaPROGRESA FINAL SK, s.r.o., Ferienčíkova 18, 81108 Bratislava-Staré Mesto, SlovakiaConstantine the Philosopher University in Nitra, Faculty of Natural Science, Department of Chemistry, Tr. A. Hlinku 1, 94974 Nitra, SlovakiaSorption of higher concentrations of Cu(II) solution onto natural sheep wool or wool irradiated by an electron beam was studied. Sorption isotherms were of unexpected character, showing extremes. The samples with lower absorbed doses adsorbed less than non-irradiated wool, while higher doses led to increased sorption varying with both concentration and dose. FTIR spectra taken from the fibre surface and bulk were different. It was concluded that there was formation of Cu(II)-complexes of carboxylic and cysteic acids with ligands coming from various keratin macromolecules. Clusters of chains crosslinked through the ligands on the surface limit diffusion of Cu(II) into the bulk of fibre, thus decreasing the sorption. After exhausting the available ligands on the surface the remaining Cu(II) cations diffuse into the keratin bulk. Here, depending on accessibility of suitable ligands, Cu(II) creates simple or complex salts giving rise to the sorption extremes. Suggestion of a mechanism for this phenomenon is presented.https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/23/12/3180sheep woolelectron irradiationcopper sorptioncopper complexesclusters |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mária Porubská Angela Kleinová Peter Hybler Jana Braniša |
spellingShingle |
Mária Porubská Angela Kleinová Peter Hybler Jana Braniša Why Natural or Electron Irradiated Sheep Wool Show Anomalous Sorption of Higher Concentrations of Copper(II) Molecules sheep wool electron irradiation copper sorption copper complexes clusters |
author_facet |
Mária Porubská Angela Kleinová Peter Hybler Jana Braniša |
author_sort |
Mária Porubská |
title |
Why Natural or Electron Irradiated Sheep Wool Show Anomalous Sorption of Higher Concentrations of Copper(II) |
title_short |
Why Natural or Electron Irradiated Sheep Wool Show Anomalous Sorption of Higher Concentrations of Copper(II) |
title_full |
Why Natural or Electron Irradiated Sheep Wool Show Anomalous Sorption of Higher Concentrations of Copper(II) |
title_fullStr |
Why Natural or Electron Irradiated Sheep Wool Show Anomalous Sorption of Higher Concentrations of Copper(II) |
title_full_unstemmed |
Why Natural or Electron Irradiated Sheep Wool Show Anomalous Sorption of Higher Concentrations of Copper(II) |
title_sort |
why natural or electron irradiated sheep wool show anomalous sorption of higher concentrations of copper(ii) |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Molecules |
issn |
1420-3049 |
publishDate |
2018-12-01 |
description |
Sorption of higher concentrations of Cu(II) solution onto natural sheep wool or wool irradiated by an electron beam was studied. Sorption isotherms were of unexpected character, showing extremes. The samples with lower absorbed doses adsorbed less than non-irradiated wool, while higher doses led to increased sorption varying with both concentration and dose. FTIR spectra taken from the fibre surface and bulk were different. It was concluded that there was formation of Cu(II)-complexes of carboxylic and cysteic acids with ligands coming from various keratin macromolecules. Clusters of chains crosslinked through the ligands on the surface limit diffusion of Cu(II) into the bulk of fibre, thus decreasing the sorption. After exhausting the available ligands on the surface the remaining Cu(II) cations diffuse into the keratin bulk. Here, depending on accessibility of suitable ligands, Cu(II) creates simple or complex salts giving rise to the sorption extremes. Suggestion of a mechanism for this phenomenon is presented. |
topic |
sheep wool electron irradiation copper sorption copper complexes clusters |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/23/12/3180 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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