Adsorption of typical gasoline vapor emitted from service stations by commercial activated carbon: static/dynamic adsorption and kinetics simulation

Gasoline vapor emissions from service stations significantly affect urban atmospheric. Despite the research on the mechanisms and effectiveness of gasoline vapor removal is limited, this study innovatively investigates the static and dynamic adsorption of xylene—a typical gasoline vapor and one of t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers of environmental science & engineering 2025-03, Vol.19 (3), p.32, Article 32
Hauptverfasser: Hu, Wei, Liang, Quanming, Lu, Dan, Li, Beibei, Ren, Biqi, Luan, Qingye, Liu, Jia, Liang, Wenjun, Huang, Yuhu
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 32
container_title Frontiers of environmental science & engineering
container_volume 19
creator Hu, Wei
Liang, Quanming
Lu, Dan
Li, Beibei
Ren, Biqi
Luan, Qingye
Liu, Jia
Liang, Wenjun
Huang, Yuhu
description Gasoline vapor emissions from service stations significantly affect urban atmospheric. Despite the research on the mechanisms and effectiveness of gasoline vapor removal is limited, this study innovatively investigates the static and dynamic adsorption of xylene—a typical gasoline vapor and one of the most active secondary organic aerosol (SOA) species—by commercial activated carbon (AC). The results showed that the saturation static adsorption capacity ( Q e ) of 12 ACs varied from 0.9 to 870.7 mg/g, which correlated with the specific surface area (SSA) and pore volume. Among them, 11# and 12# ACs were identified as the most effective adsorbents for typical gasoline vapor removal. The maximum dynamic Q e increased from 301.5 to 414.3 mg/g when the initial xylene concentration rose from 918 to 2008 mg/m 3 for 11# AC, and from 201.4 to 406.2 mg/g when the initial xylene concentration increased from 589 to 2120 mg/m 3 for 12# AC. These findings implied a direct correlation between higher initial xylene concentrations and greater dynamic Q e values, with static Q e values surpassing dynamic values. The adsorption kinetics simulation were analyzed by the pseudo-first-order (PFO) and pseudo-second-order (PSO) kinetics. The kinetics results demonstrated that the PFO was more effective in characterizing the adsorption of xylene onto ACs ( R 2 > 0.989), indicating that the adsorption of typical gasoline vapor by ACs primarily involves physical adsorption. The findings of static/dynamic adsorption and kinetics provide valuable guidance for practical applications of gasoline vapor removal in service stations.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s11783-025-1952-4
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Despite the research on the mechanisms and effectiveness of gasoline vapor removal is limited, this study innovatively investigates the static and dynamic adsorption of xylene—a typical gasoline vapor and one of the most active secondary organic aerosol (SOA) species—by commercial activated carbon (AC). The results showed that the saturation static adsorption capacity ( Q e ) of 12 ACs varied from 0.9 to 870.7 mg/g, which correlated with the specific surface area (SSA) and pore volume. Among them, 11# and 12# ACs were identified as the most effective adsorbents for typical gasoline vapor removal. The maximum dynamic Q e increased from 301.5 to 414.3 mg/g when the initial xylene concentration rose from 918 to 2008 mg/m 3 for 11# AC, and from 201.4 to 406.2 mg/g when the initial xylene concentration increased from 589 to 2120 mg/m 3 for 12# AC. These findings implied a direct correlation between higher initial xylene concentrations and greater dynamic Q e values, with static Q e values surpassing dynamic values. The adsorption kinetics simulation were analyzed by the pseudo-first-order (PFO) and pseudo-second-order (PSO) kinetics. The kinetics results demonstrated that the PFO was more effective in characterizing the adsorption of xylene onto ACs ( R 2 &gt; 0.989), indicating that the adsorption of typical gasoline vapor by ACs primarily involves physical adsorption. 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Environ. Sci. Eng</addtitle><description>Gasoline vapor emissions from service stations significantly affect urban atmospheric. Despite the research on the mechanisms and effectiveness of gasoline vapor removal is limited, this study innovatively investigates the static and dynamic adsorption of xylene—a typical gasoline vapor and one of the most active secondary organic aerosol (SOA) species—by commercial activated carbon (AC). The results showed that the saturation static adsorption capacity ( Q e ) of 12 ACs varied from 0.9 to 870.7 mg/g, which correlated with the specific surface area (SSA) and pore volume. Among them, 11# and 12# ACs were identified as the most effective adsorbents for typical gasoline vapor removal. The maximum dynamic Q e increased from 301.5 to 414.3 mg/g when the initial xylene concentration rose from 918 to 2008 mg/m 3 for 11# AC, and from 201.4 to 406.2 mg/g when the initial xylene concentration increased from 589 to 2120 mg/m 3 for 12# AC. These findings implied a direct correlation between higher initial xylene concentrations and greater dynamic Q e values, with static Q e values surpassing dynamic values. The adsorption kinetics simulation were analyzed by the pseudo-first-order (PFO) and pseudo-second-order (PSO) kinetics. The kinetics results demonstrated that the PFO was more effective in characterizing the adsorption of xylene onto ACs ( R 2 &gt; 0.989), indicating that the adsorption of typical gasoline vapor by ACs primarily involves physical adsorption. 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subjects Activated carbon
Adsorption
Earth and Environmental Science
Effectiveness
Environment
Gasoline
Kinetics
Research Article
Service stations
Vapor emission
Vapors
Xylene
title Adsorption of typical gasoline vapor emitted from service stations by commercial activated carbon: static/dynamic adsorption and kinetics simulation
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