Transformation of Cu 2 O into Metallic Copper within Matrix of Carboxylic Cation Exchangers: Synthesis and Thermogravimetric Studies of Novel Composite Materials.
Elżbieta Kociołek-BalawejderKatarzyna WiniarskaJuliusz WiniarskiIgor MuchaPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
In order to systematize and expand knowledge about copper-containing composite materials as hybrid ion exchangers, in this study, fine metallic copper particles were dispersed within the matrix of a carboxyl cation exchanger (CCE) with a macroporous and gel-type structure thanks to the reduction of Cu 2 O particles precipitated within the matrix earlier. It was possible to introduce as much as 22.0 wt% Cu 0 into a gel-type polymeric carrier (G/H#Cu) when an ascorbic acid solution was used to act as a reducer of Cu 2 O and a reagent transforming the functional groups from Na + into the H + form. The extremely high shrinkage of the porous skeleton containing -COOH groups (in a wet and also dry state) and its limited affinity for water protected the copper from oxidation without the use of special conditions. When macroporous CCE was used as a host material, the composite material (M/H#Cu) contained 18.5 wt% Cu, and copper particles were identified inside the resin beads, but not on their surface where Cu 2+ ions appeared during drying. Thermal analysis in an air atmosphere and under N 2 showed that dispersing metallic copper within the resin matrix accelerated its decomposition in both media, whereby M/H#Cu decomposed faster than G/H#Cu. It was found that G/H#Cu contained 6.0% bounded water, less than M/H#Cu (7.5%), and that the solid residue after combustion of G/H#Cu and M/H#Cu was CuO (26.28% and 22.80%), while after pyrolysis the solid residue (39.35% and 26.23%) was a mixture of carbon (50%) and metallic copper (50%). The presented composite materials thanks to the antimicrobial, catalytic, reducing, deoxygenating and hydrophobic properties of metallic copper can be used for point-of-use and column water/wastewater treatment systems.