Assessment of Unfrozen Water Content in Copper Bentonites Using the 1H NMR Technique: Optimization, the Method’s Limitation, and Comparative Analysis with DSC
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Published:2023-12-09
Issue:24
Volume:16
Page:7577
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ISSN:1996-1944
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Container-title:Materials
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Materials
Author:
Nartowska Edyta1ORCID, Kanuchova Maria2ORCID, Kozáková Ľubica2
Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Environmental Engineering, Geomatics and Renewable Energy, Kielce University of Technology, al. 1000-lecia PP 7, 25-314 Kielce, Poland 2. Faculty of Mining, Ecology, Process Control and Geotechnologies, Technical University of Kosice, Letna 9, 042 00 Kosice, Slovakia
Abstract
Studies on changes in unfrozen water content in copper bentonite from Slovakia were conducted using both differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) methods. The aims of this study were to 1. optimize the method for determining changes in unfrozen water content using the 1H NMR technique in model bentonites based on the DSC results; 2. analyze the relationship between unfrozen water content, as determined via DSC and the optimized NMR technique, and the physicochemical parameters of bentonites; and 3. identify the limitations in determining changes in unfrozen water content using the 1H NMR technique in relation to copper-contaminated bentonites. The results obtained using the optimized NMR method applied to the model bentonites correlated well with the DSC results. The unfrozen water content in the Cu-contaminated bentonites was 2–18% lower after NMR compared to the DSC results, likely due to the mobility of copper ions and their paramagnetic properties. Statistically significant differences in unfrozen water content between the DSC and NMR methods were observed, depending on molar concentration, copper ion concentration, and temperature, confirmed via Analysis of Variance (ANOVA). Calorimetric studies are recommended for investigating unfrozen water content changes in contaminated clays. Further NMR research could identify metals influencing free induction decay signals under varying physicochemical conditions.
Funder
Faculty of Environmental Engineering, Geomatics, and Renewable Energy of the Kielce University of Technology FBERG Technical University of Kosice, Slovakia
Subject
General Materials Science
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