Comparative Study on the Effect of Carbon Existence Form and Sulfur on the Hydrophilicity of Coal Pyrite Surface Based on the Density Functional Theory
2025
Peng Xi | Xiaoyu Tang | Fengling Sun | Xiaoping Fan | Guangpei Cong | Qiming Zhuo
Density functional theory (DFT) calculations were employed to examine how carbon defects, symbiosis, and sulfur influence the wettability of coal pyrite by analyzing H2O adsorption on distinct surface configurations. The comparison results of adsorption energy, Mulliken population, charge density, and electronic state density of water molecules on the surface of pyrite doped with carbon atoms show that the presence of carbon doping reduces the negative value of the adsorption energy of water molecules on the pyrite surface, the C atoms on the pyrite surface form weaker C-H bonds with the H atoms in the water molecules, the Fe-O bond strength weakens, and the thermodynamic trend weakens. And the bond of the pyrite surface with adsorbed carbon changes from an Fe-O bond to an Fe-C-O bond. The adsorption of water molecules on the pyrite surface is weakened, and there is a weaker thermodynamic trend. This is because the adsorption of carbon atoms changes from hydrophilic to nearly hydrophobic. The physical adsorption of sulfur atoms changes the adsorption energy of water molecules on the pyrite surface from negative to positive, and the bond changes from an Fe-O bond to an Fe-S-O bond, indicating that the adsorption intensity of water molecules on the pyrite surface with adsorbed sulfur is weakened, and there is no thermodynamic trend. The pyrite surface with adsorbed sulfur changes from hydrophilic to hydrophobic. Under the same impurity atom doping or adsorption concentration, the influence of sulfur on the adsorption of water molecules on the surface of pyrite is the greatest, followed by the adsorbed carbon, and the weakest is the carbon atom doping. Macroscopically, the overall hydrophobicity of the surface of coal-bearing pyrite covered with sulfur is greater than that of pyrite containing adsorbed carbon and even greater than that of coal-bearing pyrite doped with carbon atoms.
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