Carbonate Micromotors for Treatment of Construction Effluents

Concrete in construction has recently gained media coverage for its negative CO2 footprint, but this is not the only problem associated with its use. Due to its chemical composition, freshly poured concrete changes the pH of water coming in contact with the surface to very alkaline values, requiring...

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Main Authors: Purnesh Chattopadhyay, Priyanka Sharan, Andrej Berndt, Juliane Simmchen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-07-01
Series:Nanomaterials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4991/10/7/1408
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spelling doaj-5fd666ea60f54b81885f4c318c056be82020-11-25T03:02:04ZengMDPI AGNanomaterials2079-49912020-07-01101408140810.3390/nano10071408Carbonate Micromotors for Treatment of Construction EffluentsPurnesh Chattopadhyay0Priyanka Sharan1Andrej Berndt2Juliane Simmchen3Chair of Physical Chemistry, TU Dresden, 01062 Dresden, GermanyChair of Physical Chemistry, TU Dresden, 01062 Dresden, GermanyImplenia Schweiz AG, CH-8304 Wallisellen, SwitzerlandChair of Physical Chemistry, TU Dresden, 01062 Dresden, GermanyConcrete in construction has recently gained media coverage for its negative CO2 footprint, but this is not the only problem associated with its use. Due to its chemical composition, freshly poured concrete changes the pH of water coming in contact with the surface to very alkaline values, requiring neutralization treatment before disposal. Conventional methods include the use of mineral acid or CO2 pumps, causing high costs to building companies. In this paper, we present a micromotor based remediation strategy, which consists of carbonate particles half-coated with citric acid. To achieve this half coverage spray coating is used for the first time to design Janus structures. The motors propel diffusiophoretically due to a self-generated gradient formed as the acid coverage dissolves. The locally lower pH contributes to the dissolution of the carbonate body. These motors have been employed to study neutralization of diluted concrete wash water (CWW) at microscopic scale and we achieve visualization of the pH changes occurring in the vicinity of motors using anthocyanine as pH indicator dye. The effect of citric acid-carbonates hybrid on neutralization of real CWW on macroscopic scale has also been studied. In addition, all employed chemicals are cheap, non-toxic and do not leave any solid residues behind.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4991/10/7/1408pH neutralizationspray coatingactive mattercarbonate micromotors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Purnesh Chattopadhyay
Priyanka Sharan
Andrej Berndt
Juliane Simmchen
spellingShingle Purnesh Chattopadhyay
Priyanka Sharan
Andrej Berndt
Juliane Simmchen
Carbonate Micromotors for Treatment of Construction Effluents
Nanomaterials
pH neutralization
spray coating
active matter
carbonate micromotors
author_facet Purnesh Chattopadhyay
Priyanka Sharan
Andrej Berndt
Juliane Simmchen
author_sort Purnesh Chattopadhyay
title Carbonate Micromotors for Treatment of Construction Effluents
title_short Carbonate Micromotors for Treatment of Construction Effluents
title_full Carbonate Micromotors for Treatment of Construction Effluents
title_fullStr Carbonate Micromotors for Treatment of Construction Effluents
title_full_unstemmed Carbonate Micromotors for Treatment of Construction Effluents
title_sort carbonate micromotors for treatment of construction effluents
publisher MDPI AG
series Nanomaterials
issn 2079-4991
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Concrete in construction has recently gained media coverage for its negative CO2 footprint, but this is not the only problem associated with its use. Due to its chemical composition, freshly poured concrete changes the pH of water coming in contact with the surface to very alkaline values, requiring neutralization treatment before disposal. Conventional methods include the use of mineral acid or CO2 pumps, causing high costs to building companies. In this paper, we present a micromotor based remediation strategy, which consists of carbonate particles half-coated with citric acid. To achieve this half coverage spray coating is used for the first time to design Janus structures. The motors propel diffusiophoretically due to a self-generated gradient formed as the acid coverage dissolves. The locally lower pH contributes to the dissolution of the carbonate body. These motors have been employed to study neutralization of diluted concrete wash water (CWW) at microscopic scale and we achieve visualization of the pH changes occurring in the vicinity of motors using anthocyanine as pH indicator dye. The effect of citric acid-carbonates hybrid on neutralization of real CWW on macroscopic scale has also been studied. In addition, all employed chemicals are cheap, non-toxic and do not leave any solid residues behind.
topic pH neutralization
spray coating
active matter
carbonate micromotors
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4991/10/7/1408
work_keys_str_mv AT purneshchattopadhyay carbonatemicromotorsfortreatmentofconstructioneffluents
AT priyankasharan carbonatemicromotorsfortreatmentofconstructioneffluents
AT andrejberndt carbonatemicromotorsfortreatmentofconstructioneffluents
AT julianesimmchen carbonatemicromotorsfortreatmentofconstructioneffluents
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