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Title: Understanding adsorption phenomena: investigation of the dye-cellulose interaction. Author: Bird J, Brough N, Dixon S, Batchelor SN. Journal: J Phys Chem B; 2006 Oct 05; 110(39):19557-61. PubMed ID: 17004819. Abstract: To understand the structural factors that control the adsorption of acid dyes onto cotton (cellulose), the adsorption of 15 acid dyes from water has been studied. An equilibrium exists between dye adsorbed in the cotton and dye in solution, and by measurement of the temperature dependence (277-333K) of the equilibrium constant, the enthalpy and entropy of binding are obtained. For most dyes adsorption is driven by the binding enthalpy, which is ascribed to van der Waals forces. Acid dyes consist of an aromatic core with peripheral solubilizing groups (generally sulfonates). Dyes in which the sulfonates are on one side of the molecule have the largest binding enthalpy. Assuming a binding geometry where the sulfonates protrude into water pools in the bulk amorphous regions and as much as possible of the dye core touches the surface, then a good correlation exists between the binding enthalpy and the summation of 1/r(6) over all the C, N, and O dye atoms, where r is the distance of each atom from the cellulose surface.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]