Abstract
Numerous materials are employed for treating wastewaters, e.g., for the
removal of dyes from wastewater in the textile industry. However, the
regeneration/reuse of these materials is still seldom practiced.
Quantitative insights into intermolecular forces between the
contaminants and the functional surfaces might aid the rational design
of reusable materials. Here, we compare the efficacies of aliphatic
(C8H18), aromatic (C6H6), and aromatic perfluorinated (C6F6) moieties at
removing methylene blue (MB+), as a surrogate dye, from water. We
employed DFT with an implicit water model (PCM) to accurately determine
the contributions of the solvent’s electrostatics in the adsorption
process. These calculations pinpointed the relative contributions of π-π
stacking, van der Waals complexation, hydrogen bonding, and cation-π
interactions. QM predicted that MB+ would bind the strongest with C6F6
due to hydrogen bonding and the weakest with C8H18. Laboratory
experiments revealed that despite the similar hydrophobicity of silica
beads functionalized with Si-C8H17, Si-C6H5, and Si-C6F5, as
characterized by similar water contact angles, the relative uptake of
aqueous MB+ varied as Si-C6F5 (95%) > Si-C6H5 (35%)
> Si-C8H17 (3%). This first-principles-led experimental
approach can be extended to other classes of dyes, and it should advance
the rational design of adsorbents for treating wastewaters.