Z. WU et al.: EFFECT OF POTASSIUM-PERMANGANATE MODIFICATION ON THE MICROSTRUCTURE ... 853–858 EFFECT OF POTASSIUM-PERMANGANATE MODIFICATION ON THE MICROSTRUCTURE AND ADSORPTION PROPERTY OF ACTIVATED CARBON VPLIV MODIFIKACIJE S KALIJEVIM PERMANGANATOM NA MIKROSTRUKTURO IN ADSORPCIJSKE LASTNOSTI AKTIVIRANEGA OGLJIKA Zhifu Wu 1 , Peilin Qing 1 , Guiquan Guo 2 , Bingfang Shi 1* , Qiaohong Hu 2 1 School of Materials Science and Engineering, Baise University, Guangxi Baise 533000, China 2 School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Xingtai University, No. 88, Quanbei East Street, Qiaodong District, Xingtai 054001, China Prejem rokopisa – received: 2019-03-28; sprejem za objavo – accepted for publication: 2019-07-03 doi:10.17222/mit.2019.068 Potassium permanganate was loaded onto activated carbon using the impregnation method to obtain modified activated carbon. The activated carbon and activated carbon loaded with potassium permanganate were then placed in a closed, newly decorated house. It was found that formaldehyde amount decreased sharply after the adsorption of the activated carbon, and further decreased after the adsorption of the activated carbon modified with potassium permanganate. By measuring the amount of formaldehyde in the room before and after the adsorption of the activated carbon, the adsorption capacity of the two with respect to formaldehyde was compared. The experimental results showed that the adsorption capacity of the potassium-perman- ganate-modified activated carbon increased significantly. A specific-surface-area and porosity analyzer, field-emission scanning electron microscope, transmission electron microscope and powder X-ray diffractometer were used to characterize the activated carbon modified with potassium permanganate. The specific surface area of the activated carbon modified with potassium permanganate increased significantly, the number of micropores increased and the pore size decreased. In addition, the mechanism of its adsorption of formaldehyde was discussed. Keywords: formaldehyde, modification, potassium permanganate, activated carbon Avtorji prispevka so kalijev permanganat nanesli na aktivirani ogljik z impregnacijsko metodo zato, da bi ga s tem modificirali. Aktivirano oglje in aktivirani ogljik v prisotnosti kalijevega permanganata so nato postavili v zaprto, na novo opremljeno hi{o. Ugotovili so, da vsebnost formaldehida strmo pade po adsorpciji z aktiviranim ogljikom in {e bolj, ko je prisoten aktivirani ogljik, modificiran s kalijevim permanganatom. Meritve adsorpcijske kapacitete za formaldehid v sobi, pred in po adsorpciji z aktiviranim ogljikom, so izvedli primerjalno za obe vrsti aktiviranega ogljika. Eksperimentalni rezultati so pokazali, da je adsorpcijska kapaciteta za formaldehid mo~no narasla v prisotnosti ogljika, aktiviranega s kalijevim permanganatom. Za karakterizacijo obeh vrst aktiviranega ogljika so uporabili merilnik specifi~ne povr{ine preseka, analizator poroznosti, vrsti~ni elektronski mikroskop na poljsko emisijo, presevni elektronski mikroskop in pra{kovni rentgenski difraktometer. Specifi~na povr{ina aktiviranega ogljika, modificiranega s kalijevim permanganatom, se je znatno pove~ala, {tevilo mikropor je naraslo in velikost por se je zmanj{ala. Avtorji v ~lanku razpravljajo tudi o mehanizmih adsorpcije formaldehida na njem. Klju~ne besede: formaldehid, modifikacija, kalijev permanganat, aktivirani ogljik 1 INTRODUCTION According to a survey, more than 80 % of the time of humans is spent indoors. So the indoor-air quality is directly related to people’s health. Formaldehyde is one of the most common indoor air pollutants, and the removal of formaldehyde is an extremely important task, especially in developing countries. This kind of harmful gas is mainly derived from adhesives, indoor furniture with artificial boards as raw materials, wallpaper, paints and other decorative materials. 1,2 Long-time exposure to low-dose formaldehyde can easily lead to chronic respiratory diseases, neonatal physical deterioration, pregnancy syndrome and even cancer. A high concen- tration of formaldehyde is harmful to the human nervous system, immune system and liver. Epidemiological studies show that people who are exposed to formal- dehyde for a long time are prone to cancer of the nasopharynx, skin and digestive tract. Therefore, the harmful effect of indoor formaldehyde has attracted more and more attention. 3–6 The present treatment technologies of indoor formaldehyde pollution mainly include ozone oxidation, 7,8 photocatalytic oxidation, 9–14 the adsorption method, 15,16 plant-absorption method 17,18 and metal-oxide method. The adsorption method is characterized by high speed, convenience and low cost. The adsorption methods mainly include physical adsorp- tion and chemical adsorption. The most commonly used sorbents for physical adsorption are granular activated carbon and activated carbon fiber. 19 The chemical adsorbents usually include modified activated carbon, 20,21 and activated carbon is originally an excellent adsorption material. Products modified with various methods have the characteristics of a strong selectivity and stability. Materiali in tehnologije / Materials and technology 53 (2019) 6, 853–858 853 UDK 66.017:67.017:546.717’32:66.021.3.081.3 ISSN 1580-2949 Original scientific article/Izvirni znanstveni ~lanek MTAEC9, 53(6)853(2019) *Corresponding author's e-mail: Shibingfang@126.com, 1781177844@qq.com (Bingfang Shi) These products not only have a large specific surface area and a suitable pore-size distribution, but also surface functional groups. The heat resistance, acid resistance and alkali resistance of activated carbon were further improved. Most importantly, the activated carbon modi- fied during our experiment can avoid two times the pollution, and the effect of its repeated use after a hot regeneration is even better. This paper reports on the use of activated carbon as the carrier for potassium per- manganate using impregnation. The effect of the activated carbon modified with potassium permanganate on the indoor-formaldehyde removal is studied, and the mechanism of removing formaldehyde with activated carbon and modified activated carbon is discussed. 2 EXPERIMENTAL PART 2.1 Reagents and instruments Activated carbon, analytical pure formaldehyde solution (37–40 %, Tianjin Wind Ship Chemical Reagent Company), potassium permanganate (Shanghai Pharma- ceutical Reagent Co. Ltd., analytically pure), distilled water, a Panako multifunctional powder X-ray diffracto- meter (a test voltage of 40 kV, a current of 20 mA, a scanning speed of 0.03°/s, continuous scan, 10–80°, Cu-K ( = 0.15418 nm), an McGeMINI VII 2390 automatic specific surface and porosity analyzer (gas adsorption time of 2 h, temperature of 200 °C), a JEOLJSM-6701F field-emission scanning electron microscope, a transmission electron microscope (FEI TACNAI TF20) and a Xuzhou Xingke six-in-one formaldehyde detector (Xuzhou Xingke Instrument Co., Ltd) were used. 2.2 Preparation of the activated carbon loaded with potassium permanganate The activated carbon loaded with potassium per- manganate was prepared by soaking a certain amount of activated carbon in a 0.079 mol·L –1 potassium-perman- ganate solution, oscillating it in an ultrasonic oscillator for 2 h, drying it at 100 °C and taking it out after cool- ing. 2.3 Determination of the iodine value of the activated carbon A dry activated-carbon sample of 0.5 g was moved into a 100-mL iodine bottle containing a 10 mL HCl solution (1+9). It was heated to boiling for 30 s and cooled to room temperature. Then a 50 mL 0.1 mol·L –1 iodine solution was added to it and the mixture was shaken for 15 min, keeping the lid on, and filtered into a dry beaker. Then the 10-mL filtrate was removed with a pipette and moved into a 250-mL iodine bottle, adding 100 mL of distilled water to it and titrating it with a solution of 0.1 mol·L –1 sodium thiosulfate. When the solution became yellow, a 2-mL starch indicator was added and it was titrated to a colorless solution. The volume of the sodium-thiosulfate solution was recorded. 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION 3.1 Changes in the iodine value of the activated carbon The iodine value is the numerical value, representing the amount of the adsorbed iodine in a standard iodine solution, generally used to indicate the adsorption capacity of activated carbon with respect to small molecular impurities. The higher the iodine value, the better the adsorption effect of activated carbon. Our experiment shows that the iodine value of the activated carbon after its modification with potassium perman- ganate was increased by 1.4505 %, that is, the adsorption capacity of the activated carbon was increased. 3.2 Comparison of the formaldehyde amounts in the room before and after the activated-carbon adsorption The amount of formaldehyde in the room was de- tected through multi-point control (master bedroom, secondary bedroom, study room, living room). The amount of formaldehyde above 0.10 mg·m –3 exceeds the standard. The average amount of formaldehyde in the room before the experiment was 0.14 mg·m –3 . The ave- rage amount of formaldehyde after the activated-carbon adsorption was 0.1 mg·m –3 . The average amount of formaldehyde was further reduced to 0.08 mg·m –3 after the adsorption of the modified activated carbon. The experimental results show that the effect of the activated carbon loaded with potassium permanganate on the indoor formaldehyde was significantly better than that of the unmodified activated carbon. 3.3 Analysis with field-emission scanning electron microscopy Figure 1 includes SEM images of the powdered activated carbon. From Figure 1, it can be seen that the size of the powdered-activated-carbon particles is not uniform and has a strip distribution. From SEM 1a, it can be seen that the size of many activated-carbon particles is about 45 μm × 30 μm, the surface is smooth, and a lot of white matter is attached to it. Figure 2 includes the images before the adsorption of potassium-permanganate activated carbon. It can be seen from Figure 2 that the activated carbon after the potassium-permanganate modification is massive, rough and uneven. Figure 3 shows the activated carbon loaded with potassium per- manganate. From Figure 3, it can be seen that after the adsorption of the activated carbon modified by potassium permanganate, there is a coral-like distribution observed with the scanning electron microscope. There are many fine particles and obvious pores on the surface. According to the comparison between Figures 2 and 3, the morphologies of the activated carbon before and after the modification were very different. Z. WU et al.: EFFECT OF POTASSIUM-PERMANGANATE MODIFICATION ON THE MICROSTRUCTURE ... 854 Materiali in tehnologije / Materials and technology 53 (2019) 6, 853–858 3.4 Powder X-ray diffraction Figure 4 shows XRD patterns of the three samples. It can be seen from the diagram that the diffraction patterns are burry, indicating that the particles are very small. The three samples have three strong diffraction peaks belonging to the activated carbon at 2 being 27°, 44° and 60°, and there is no difference between the XRD diagrams of the activated carbon without potassium permanganate and the activated carbon loaded with Z. WU et al.: EFFECT OF POTASSIUM-PERMANGANATE MODIFICATION ON THE MICROSTRUCTURE ... Materiali in tehnologije / Materials and technology 53 (2019) 6, 853–858 855 Figure 3: SEM images of the potassium-permanganate-modified activated carbon after the formaldehyde adsorption Figure 1: SEM images of the activated carbon Figure 2: SEM images of the potassium-permanganate-modified activated carbon before the formaldehyde adsorption Figure 4: XRD patterns of the three samples: a) powdered activated carbon, b) activated carbon, c) activated carbon loaded with potassium permanganate potassium permanganate. When compared with the standard material database, the JCPDS of this kind of C is 89-8487, which indicates that potassium permanganate is in isolation. The loading of potassium permanganate onto the activated carbon did not change the lattice structure of the carbon. The adsorption of formaldehyde is part of the chemical process. 3.5 Specific surface area and porosity analysis (N 2 ad- sorption) Figure 5 shows nitrogen-adsorption isotherms for the activated-carbon samples. The powdered activated carbon is labeled as 5a, and the activated carbon loaded with potassium permanganate is labeled as 5b. Generally speaking, the initial stage of an adsorption isotherm represents the micropore filling of N 2 , and the adsorption isotherm rises rapidly at a low relative pressure. The superposition of the adsorption force field in pore walls leads to a significant increase in the adsorption potential of micropores. This superposition effect occurs in a narrow aperture range. The superposition effect does not exist in mesoporous and large pores, thus the micropores are the main site for an adsorbate. Adsorption occurs on the mesoporous and large pores and outer surfaces at a high relative pressure, and capillary condensation occurs in mesopores; thus, the level of adsorption increases and the isotherm continues to rise. When P/P 0 is greater than 0.2, pores and macropores adsorb a small amount, and the isotherm rises slowly. When P/P 0 is close to 1, the adsorbate fills in macropores due to capillary con- densation, and a small increase in the isothermal line occurs. Line 5a is a type-fourth isotherm with a hysteresis loop. When the relative pressure is less than 0.2, the adsorption capacity of activated carbon with respect to N 2 is smaller. When the relative pressure is greater than 0.2, the adsorption capacity of the activated carbon with respect to N 2 increases with the increase in the pressure, but this trend slows down, indicating the existence of mesopores in the activated carbon. The interaction force between the potassium-permanganate-activated carbon and N 2 is strong, and there are abundant micropores in the activated carbon. Line 5b shows the micropore filling characteristic of a type-one isotherm, and the limit adsorption amount is the measure of the micropore volume, indicating an extremely high surface absorption. When the relative pressure is 0.2–1.0, there is a straight line as the adsorption and desorption lines are basically not separated. Figure 6 shows the pore-size distribution of the acti- vated carbon and modified activated carbon. The pow- dered activated carbon is labeled as 6a and the activated carbon loaded with potassium permanganate is labeled as 6b. It can be seen from Figure 6 that the pore-size dis- tribution of the two activated carbons is mainly concen- trated below 10 nm. The average pore size of the activated carbon and activated carbon loaded potassium permanganate is below 10 nm, but the average pore size of the latter is smaller than that of the former. 3.6 Analysis with transmission electron microscopy Figure 7 shows the transmission-electron-micro- scope results for the powdered activated carbon used in the experiment. Figure 8 shows transmission-electron- microscope results before the adsorption of the activated carbon loaded with potassium permanganate. Figure 9 shows transmission-electron-microscope results after the absorption of the activated carbon loaded with potassium permanganate. From Figure 7, it can be seen that the powdered activated carbon is distributed in a strip, and 7a shows a tiny active-carbon particle of about 1×0.5 μm; its surface is rough and uneven. Figure 7b is a magnified image of 7a, showing the existence of pores in the activated carbon. It can be seen from Figures 8a and 8b that the Z. WU et al.: EFFECT OF POTASSIUM-PERMANGANATE MODIFICATION ON THE MICROSTRUCTURE ... 856 Materiali in tehnologije / Materials and technology 53 (2019) 6, 853–858 Figure 6: Pore-size and pore-volume-distribution curves of the activated carbon:a) before the adsorption, b)after the adsorption Figure 5: N 2 adsorption isotherms: a) activated carbon, b) modified activated carbon morphology of the activated carbon after the potassium- permanganate modification is not very different from that in Figure 7, and there are pores of about 2 nm. However, the amount of micropores displayed in Figure 8c is obviously increased, which is due to the etching of the activated carbon carried out with potassium perman- ganate. As can be seen from Figures 9a and 9b, no obvious holes were observed in the activated carbon loaded with potassium permanganate, but the amount of micropores shown in Figure 9c is larger than those from Figures 7c and 8c, and the pore size is further reduced to below 2 nm. By comparing Figures 7 and 8, it can be seen that the morphology of the activated carbon changed greatly. Figure 10 shows a schematic diagram of the micropore change of the activated carbon. The decrease in the pore volume is smaller than that of the total pore volume, resulting in an increase in the percentage of the total pore volume of micropores. Z. WU et al.: EFFECT OF POTASSIUM-PERMANGANATE MODIFICATION ON THE MICROSTRUCTURE ... Materiali in tehnologije / Materials and technology 53 (2019) 6, 853–858 857 Figure 9: TEM images of the potassium-permanganate-modified activated carbon after the formaldehyde adsorption Figure 8: TEM images before the adsorption of formaldehyde onto the potassium-permanganate-modified activated carbon Figure 7: TEM images of the activated carbon 4 CONCLUSIONS The activated carbon loaded with potassium perman- ganate can be used to adsorb indoor formaldehyde, and the effect is obvious. First, formaldehyde molecules are adsorbed on the surface of the activated carbon, then they gradually permeate and aggregate into micropores. Some molecules remain in the micropores, some react with potassium permanganate loaded on the activated carbon, forming carbon dioxide and water, thus degrad- ing completely. The adsorption capacity of the potas- sium-permanganate-modified activated carbon with respect to indoor formaldehyde is significantly better than that of the unmodified activated carbon. It effect- ively eliminates the effect of indoor formaldehyde on people’s health. Acknowledgments This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.21665001), the Cha- racteristic Research Team for Aluminum Matrix Compo- site Materials of the Baise University (081005002), Guangxi College’s and University’s Key Subject of Material Physics and Chemistry (090106001), the Con- struction Funds of the Master’s Degree Granting Units from the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region for 2019 and the Municipal People’s Livelihood Science and Technology Security Special Project of the Xingtai City in 2018 (2018ZZ18). 5 REFERENCES 1 D. Bourdin, P. Mocho, V. Desauziers, H. Plaisance, Formaldehyde emission behavior of building materials: on-site measurements and modeling approach to predict indoor air pollution, J. Hazard. Mater., 280 (2014), 164–173, doi:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2014.07.065 2 J. Li, H. Jia, Y. Ding, H. Luo, S. Abbas, Z. Liu, L. Hu, C. 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WU et al.: EFFECT OF POTASSIUM-PERMANGANATE MODIFICATION ON THE MICROSTRUCTURE ... 858 Materiali in tehnologije / Materials and technology 53 (2019) 6, 853–858 Figure 10: Schematic diagram of the pore-size change of the activated carbon before and after the potassium permanganate etching