Effect of UV radiation on the structure of graphene oxide in water and its impact on cytotoxicity and As(III) adsorption
Abstract
Graphene oxide (GO) is widely used in different applications, however once release into the environment it can change its structure and affect the transport of important contaminants such as arsenic. In this work we show that UV radiation, even in the range of 28-74 uW/cm2 of irradiance up to 120 h of exposure, can induce important changes in the structure of graphene oxide, by eliminating -OH and C=O functional groups. This reduction affected the stability of graphene oxide in water by decreasing its zeta potential from 41 to 37 mV with the increase of the exposure time. Our results showed that after 24 h of UV exposure, As(III) adsorption capacity decreased from 5 mg/g to 4.7 mg/g, however after 48 h of irradiation the adsorption increased with time, reaching 5.1 mg/g at 120 h under 74 uW/cm2 of irradiation. Computer modelling showed that even a degraded GO structure can have an interaction energy of 53 kcal/mol with H3AsO3. Furthermore, we observed that despite clear changes in surface composition and particle size, the reduction of graphene oxide maintained a high degree of cytotoxicity since cell viability decreased to 60% with a 50 ug/ml dose; except for the sample irradiated at 74 uW/cm2 for five days, which showed 20% with the same concentration.
- Publication:
-
Chemosphere
- Pub Date:
- June 2020
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.126160
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1905.12167
- Bibcode:
- 2020Chmsp.24926160G
- Keywords:
-
- Condensed Matter - Materials Science;
- Physics - Applied Physics;
- Physics - Biological Physics