1. Introduction
Prospects in water treatment keep booming as freshwater availability declines. Phenolics constitute about 10% of the priority pollutant list for water issued by the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC, USA). Activated carbon is a great adsorbent of organics. However, it needs to be heated for it to be in the active state required for adsorption [
1]. Biomass is known to bind contaminants onto its cellular structure by a physicochemical process referred to as biosorption [
2,
3,
4]. Bio-wastes, such as spent tea leaves, are largely untapped materials to develop inexpensive and effective tools for wastewater treatment.
Phenols, being acidic in nature, need sites on the bio-waste to be basic enough for efficient removal. However, unmodified bio-wastes do not have enough of these strongly basic sites needed for phenol removal.
Modifying surfaces to improve reactivity is a known idea implemented widely on artificial polymers [
5]. The challenge with modifying a bio-based material is that the main functional group available for performing any reactions is the hydroxy group. The approach of modifying lignocellulosic material is currently explored by combining mechanical and chemical approaches, with a particular emphasis on green aspects [
6,
7]. The effort so far has been geared towards creating carboxyl groups. Carboxyl groups, being acidic in nature, are not expected to interact with the acidic phenolic group. Rather, a basic group, such as an amine, can remove the phenol by an acid–base reaction.
Modification of lignocellulosic material is difficult due to the complexity of the bio-waste. For example, “spent” green tea leaves contain about 20 weight percent of phenolics and saponins and 25 weight percent of crude proteins [
8] in addition to the cellulose. In a preliminary work, aminated and thiolated leaves were prepared following the procedure developed by Abel et al. [
9]. These modified tea leaves exhibited significant adsorption of Cu(II) ions in aqueous systems compared to the unmodified “spent” tea leaves (
Table 1).
One reason for the enhanced interaction between the newly introduced functional group and the Copper (II) ions is thought to be due to the chain length onto which the group is tethered. This has been suggested even in the work of Abel et al. [
9], where the maximum benefit for their application (anti-bacterial activity) was observed when the chain length was 16 methylenes long. Amines are known to react with phenols forming the corresponding ammonium salts. Therefore, the idea was to identify the optimal “spacer” for amines.
For this study, the optimum chain length was determined based on the effectiveness as a 2-CP absorbent. There is considerable literature evidence that functional groups linked directly to a glucose ring without a spacer impose considerable steric hindrance. For example, if the thiol group is linked directly to the glucose ring, the abstraction of hydrogen from the SH by a polymeric radical [
10] is inhibited.
The goal of this project is to develop eco-friendly filters using raw solid wastes to effectively remove phenols as part of a water treatment process. Another advantage would be the easy regeneration of the solid waste with a base to obtain the phenols back for reuse in other manufacturing processes.
2. Materials and Methods
The synthetic scheme using hexamethylene diamine for placing the amino group at the end of a six-carbon chain is shown in
Scheme 1. The same scheme was used with the following amines: 1,8-diaminooctane, 1,10-diaminodecane, and 1,12-diaminododecane. This tethered the amine groups on the spent green tea leaves with varying chain lengths. This scheme extends work done by Abel et al. to modify cotton [
9].
2.1. Solvents and Reagents
The water used in all experiments was the Millipore filtered de-ionized (DI) water. Solvents, such as pyridine and acetonitrile, were used as supplied without further purification in the synthetic steps. Pyridine was purchased from Acros Organics (Pittsburgh, PA, USA). ACS Certified acetonitrile was obtained from Fisher Scientific (Pittsburgh, PA, USA). Pyridine and acetonitrile were used in the tosylation and amination steps, respectively. ACS Certified analytical grade ammonium chloride was obtained from Acros Organics (Pittsburgh, PA, USA). Ammonium hydroxide was obtained from Fisher Scientific (Pittsburgh, PA, USA). The 4-Aminoantipyrine was purchased from Sigma Aldrich (Atlanta, GA, USA) and used without any further purification. Potassium ferricyanide (for analysis, 99+%) was obtained from Acros Organics (Pittsburgh, PA, USA). ACS Grade 2-Chlorophenol from Acros Organics (Pittsburgh, PA, USA) was used in the studies. Solutions of 2-CP were always freshly prepared before use. Due to the photosensitive nature of 2-CP solutions, volumetric flasks containing its solution were always wrapped in aluminum foil. Amber colored glass tubes were used for equilibration studies to protect the 2-CP from any decomposition. Activated carbon (AC), NORIT™ SA 2, from Acros Organics (Pittsburgh, PA, USA) was used in the study.
The biowaste used for the project was obtained from green tea bags. The bags were boiled in water repeatedly to remove all water-soluble compounds. The tea bags were then dried in the oven. The spent tea leaves were removed from the bags and subjected to Soxhlet extraction with a 1:1 mixture of ethanol and acetone (400 mL of solvent mixture per 20 g of spent tea leaves). The tea leaves were dried in the oven at 50 °C till constant weight. Soxhlet extracted green tea leaves are abbreviated as SEGT.
2.2. Preparation of Tosylated Green Tea (TosGT)
TsCl (253.8 g, 1.3 mol) was placed in a 1 L Wheaton bottle. Soxhlet Extracted Green Tea (SEGT) (31.5 g, 0.194 mol) was added to the tosyl chloride. For the calculations, SEGT was assumed to be 100% cellulose, and only one −OH group from an anhydroglucose unit (AGU unit, molecular weight (MW) = 162 g/mol) was considered to react. Pyridine (600 mL) was added to the bottle and sonicated for 20 min followed by magnetic stirring at room temperature for 96 h. The reason for a reaction time of 96 h can be found under results and discussion. The pyridine solution was then decanted off into a waste container. Ice cold water was added to dissolve the pyridine clinging to the surface of the tea leaves [
11]. The tea leaves were washed five times with ice-cold water (~200 mL each time) to remove pyridine and other by-products. The washes were monitored using pH paper till neutrality. The tea leaves were then washed with acetone thoroughly. The purpose of the acetone washes was to remove un-reacted tosyl chloride. The acetone washes were monitored using a silica gel plate impregnated with a fluorescent material and UV lamp. The tea leaves were then vacuum-filtered. They were air dried to constant weight.
The tosylation step produced 40.91 g of the product from 31.48 g of SEGT (Soxhlet Extracted Green Tea). Its purity was estimated to be at least 97%, based on the amount of chlorine present in the tosylated tea leaves, as determined by elemental analysis. The number of moles of tosyl group per gram of the tosylated material was estimated based on the increase of mass after the tosylation step. This was found to be 1.5 mmol/g of TosGT.
2.3. Preparation of the Various Aminated Green Teas (C6-AGT; C8-AGT; C10-AGT; and C12-AGT)
The tosylated tea leaves were subjected to amination using four different diamines to produce four different kinds of aminated tea leaves. The diamines used were hexamethylene diamine (C-6 diamine), 1,8-octanediamine (C-8 diamine), 1,10-decanediamine (C-10 diamine), and 1,12-dodecanediamine (C12-diamine). This resulted in the displacement of the tosyl group by one of the amino groups in the diamine while the second amine group remained attached to the other end. This resulted in a family of aminated tea leaves with the amine functionality tethered at the end of varying chain lengths. Cross-linking was prevented by targeting a 1:8 mole ratio of tosylate functionality to the diamine.
Each diamine (0.12 mol) was placed in a 500 mL bottle and dissolved in acetonitrile (250 mL). The C-10 diamine (1,10-decanediamine) and C-12 diamine (1,12-dodecanediamine) were distinctly less soluble than the C-8 diamine (1,8-octanediamine) and the C-6 diamine (hexamethylenediamine). Tosylated tea leaves (10 g) were then poured into the acetonitrile solution containing the varying diamines. The mixture was initially sonicated for 20 min followed by magnetic stirring at room temperature (19 h in the case of the C-8 diamine; 68 h for the other three diamines). The acetonitrile solutions containing the diamine were decanted off at that point. Ice cold aqueous NaOH solution (2 N, 500 mL) was added followed by magnetic stirring (5 min). Stirring with the base solution was carried out to accomplish the conversion of the ammonium tosylate salt to the diamine as shown in
Scheme 2. Note that
Scheme 1 does not show the ammonium tosylate formation explicitly.
The tea leaves were transferred to a beaker and distilled water (200 mL) was added to it. Five water washes were performed to remove all traces of sodium hydroxide followed by acetone washing to remove traces of diamines. This was monitored by spotting the acetone washes on a wet pH paper. The tea leaves were then vacuum filtered. In the case of the C-12 diamine, ethanol washes were used initially before the acetone washes to aid in its complete removal. The four aminated tea leaves (each weighing in the range of 8.7–9.2 g) were air dried to constant weight and bottled off till further use.
2.4. Characterization
Elemental Analyses were performed at the Robertson Microlit Laboratories in Ledgewood, New Jersey. A Frontier Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer (Perkin Elmer, Waltham, MA, USA) with a Universal Attenuated Total Reflectance (UATR) attachment was used for obtaining infrared spectra of the chemically modified tea leaves. Pictures of the morphological texture were obtained using a tabletop scanning electron microscope, Model TM3000, from Hitachi High-Technologies (Pleasanton, CA, USA). Samples were viewed directly without gold coating. Quantax 70, an optical accessory for TM 3000, was used to obtain energy dispersive X-ray spectra (EDS). It was purchased from Bruker (Billerica, MA, USA). This was used to gauge the relative abundance of elements on the surface of chemically modified tea leaves.
2.5. Equilibrium Conditions for Adsorption
Amber glass tubes (8 cm long with a diameter of 2.5 cm) with Teflon-lined screw caps were used for the equilibration experiments. Varying amounts of the aminated tea leaves and solutions containing 2-CP at the appropriate concentrations were placed in these tubes. Targeted concentrations of 2-CP solutions were prepared by making a stock solution of 1000 ppm and diluting it with Millipore filtered DI water to the desired concentration.
The tubes were placed in the “built-in” sample holders of the incubator/shaker. The I24 incubator shaker used in the study was purchased from New Brunswick Scientific (Edison, NJ, USA). Equilibration was performed at ambient conditions overnight at a setting of 250 rpm (revolutions per minute). Agitation involved horizontal circular motions.
2.6. Analysis: Phenol Estimation
This was based on the spectrophotometric method described in the 21st edition of “Standard Methods for the examination of Water and Wastewater” [
12]. According to the procedure, the sample, blank, and standards should all be at a pH of 10 ± 0.1 with the buffer used.
The microplate reader was purchased from Molecular Devices (San Jose, CA, USA). Absorbance measurements at 500 nm were obtained using SpectraMax iD3 from Molecular Devices (San Jose, CA, USA). A UV-transparent microplate with 96 wells (well capacity of 500 µL) was used for performing the absorbance measurements at 500 nm. The absorbance of the blank plate was initially obtained. The blank absorbance values of the respective wells were subtracted from the observed values with sample solutions.
The 4-aminoantipyrine method [
12] was adapted to be performed in Eppendorf vials (1.5 mL) as follows: to 910 µL of the buffer solution, 50 µL of the phenol solution and 20 µL each of the potassium ferricyanide and 4-aminoantipyrine solutions were added. After mixing, 200 µL of the mixture was used for plating the wells. Absorbance measurements were made within 15 min of combining the solutions.
Analyses were performed in duplicate. The original phenol solutions used in the different studies were analyzed. Amount of decrease in absorbance as compared to the absorbance of the original solution is reported as a percentage. The reported percentage amount of 2-CP removed is the mean value for the two analyses. Mean absolute deviation is also included.
2.7. Desorption Studies
Details of the adsorption/desorption pair of experiments are given in this section.
2.7.1. Details of Adsorption
C6-AGT (0.5 g) and activated carbon (0.5 g) were each placed in two different 250 mL Wheaton bottles and mixed with a 2-CP solution (100 mL, 75 ppm). The bottles were wrapped in aluminum foil. They were placed in the shaker and allowed to equilibrate at 250 rpm overnight. Then, suspensions were gravity filtered and poured back in the bottles. This was repeated five times to ensure complete transfer of the solids on to the filter paper. They were allowed to air dry on the lab bench overnight. They had dried to constant weight at that point. The filtrate was analyzed to determine the percentage of 2-CP adsorbed.
2.7.2. Details of Desorption
One hundred and fifty milligrams (150 mg) of C6-AGT and activated charcoal that had adsorbed the 2-CP (see
Section 2.7.1) were each placed in three of the amber tubes. The three tubes were filled with aqueous hydrochloric acid (0.1 N, 30 mL), the sodium hydroxide solution (0.1 N, 30 mL), and Millipore filtered DI (de-ionized) water (30 mL). The solutions were placed in the shaker and equilibrated at room temperature at a speed of 250 rpm for 2 h. The solutions were then analyzed for 2-CP following the procedure described in
Section 2.6 for Phenol Analysis.
4. Conclusions
In this study, among the four aminated tea leaves, C6-AGT, which has a chain of six methylenes, showed the best adsorption capacity. About 40% of the 2-CP is removed from a 75 ppm aqueous solution at a loading of 150 mg. The percentages adsorbed and desorbed can be further improved by optimizing the reaction conditions used for making these aminated tea leaves.
Desorption using aqueous acidic or basic solutions released more than twice as much of the 2-CP compared to neutral water, strongly suggesting acid–base interactions. This confirmed our expectations that the amine group in the adsorbent would interact with the phenolic group in 2-CP via an acid–base reaction. Tethering the amine beyond six carbons does not appear to produce any additional benefit.
The ultimate goal of this project is to prepare this C6-AGT using aqueous environmentally friendly reagents. The issues with this approach have been well-documented in Melo et al.’s review of chemical modifications of lignocellulosics [
18]. It appears that the green approaches lead to fewer reactions sites on the surface. Future work will explore the use of spacers of around six atoms to ameliorate this issue. The ultimate goal is to use bio-waste modified in an environmentally friendly manner to remove pollutants from our current environment.