Tina
Skorjanc
a,
Dinesh
Shetty
ab,
Felipe
Gándara
c,
Liaqat
Ali
d,
Jesus
Raya
e,
Gobinda
Das
a,
Mark A.
Olson
f and
Ali
Trabolsi
*a
aScience Division, New York University Abu Dhabi, Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. E-mail: ali.trabolsi@nyu.edu
bDepartment of Chemistry, Khalifa University, P.O. Box: 127788, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
cThe Materials Science Factory, Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid–CSIC, 28049, Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz 3, Madrid, Spain
dCore Technology Platform, New York University Abu Dhabi, Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
eMembrane Biophysics and NMR, Institute of Chemistry, UMR 7177, University of Strasbourg, CNRS, Strasbourg, France
fSchool of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology, Tianjin University, 92 Weijin Rd., Nankai District, Tianjin, P. R. China
First published on 22nd November 2019
The presence of carcinogenic bromate (BrO3−) in drinking water became a global concern and efforts towards its removal mainly focused on addressing the source. Herein, we rationally designed a porphyrin-based covalent organic framework (PV-COF) with a cationic surface to provide electrostatic interactions and a porphyrin core to induce hydrogen bonding interactions for the efficient removal of BrO3− from water. Through H-bonding and electrostatic interactions, PV-COF exhibited an exceptional bromate removal efficiency (maximum adsorption capacity, Qmax: 203.8 mg g−1) with the fastest uptake rate (kads) of 191.45 g mg−1 min−1. The bromate concentration was reduced to far below the allowed concentration in drinking water (10 ppb) within 20 minutes. We studied the relationship between bromate adsorption and COF surface modification by metalation of the porphyrinic core or neutralization of the viologen linkers by chemical reduction. The bromate adsorption mechanism was studied by EDAX mapping and molecular simulations, and it was found that ion exchange and hydrogen bonding formation drive the adsorption. Importantly, PV-COF could be easily recycled several times without compromising its adsorption efficiency.
Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are a novel class of porous, crystalline materials with tunable structures and extensive surface areas.15,16 COFs have been utilized for the removal of various pollutants from water, including toxic dyes,17 heavy metals,18–20 pharmaceuticals,21 and other toxins.22 However, adsorption of BrO3− is unprecedented for COFs. Herein, we report a cationic porphyrin COF with viologen units (PV-COF) obtained through the Zincke reaction23 for the efficient removal of bromate from water. While a handful of porphyrin-based COFs have been reported,24–26 they are synthesized through the formation of boronic esters or imine bonds, which are known to have limited chemical stability. Contradistinctively, PV-COF is formed from the generation of a quaternary ammonium salt, which does not easily hydrolyze.27 We tested the utility of PV-COF in removing bromate from drinking water because of its inherent properties, whereby its cationic charge can induce favorable electrostatic interactions with anionic BrO3−, and its porphyrin core can form hydrogen bonds28 with BrO3−. Bromate adsorption by PV-COF was extremely fast with a remarkable uptake rate constant of 191.45 g mg−1 min−1. At this rate, the reduction of an aqueous bromate concentration of 50 μg L−1 to less than 3 μg L−1, which is far below the allowed concentration in drinking water, occurred in just 20 minutes. The material exhibited a maximum uptake capacity (Qmax) of 203.8 mg g−1, which is one of the highest values reported to date. In addition, we post-synthetically modified PV-COF through metallation and chemical reduction, and tested the ability of products to adsorb BrO3− in order to understand the structure–property relationships which governed their performance.
Morphological studies on PV-COF using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) revealed the presence of uniform spherical particles (Fig. 2b and c). Elemental mapping using energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) showed an even distribution of relevant elements (C, N and Cl) throughout the spherical particles (Fig. S2†). An average diameter of 1.4 μm ± 0.18 μm for these spheres was calculated from TEM micrographs (Fig. S3a†). Similarly, dynamic light scattering measurements provided an average diameter of 1.8 μm ± 0.2 μm with a polydispersity index of 0.206 (Fig. S3b†). The surface charge of the PV-COF particles was found to be positive (ζ-potential = +13.6 mV) owing to the presence of viologen units in their backbone (Fig. S4†). The porosity of PV-COF was characterized by nitrogen gas sorption isotherm measurements. A modest Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) surface area of 38.2 m2 g−1 (Fig. S5a†) was calculated for the material, possibly due to the presence of chloride counterions that may block some of the network pores. The network was mesoporous in nature with a pore size of 2.3 nm (Fig. S5b†), which is in good agreement with the material's calculated pore size. Thermogravimetric analysis of PV-COF confirmed that ∼80% of the material remained stable up to ∼400 °C (Fig. S6†).
According to its powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) pattern, PV-COF is crystalline with Bragg diffraction peaks at 2θ = 3.86°, 7.39°, and 10.90°. They were assigned to the (100), (200), and (300) Miller planes, respectively, in agreement with a tetragonal unit cell (Table S1†). Thus, a crystal model was built and geometrically optimized in the tetragonal P space group, where PV-COF forms square layers that are disposed parallel to the ab plane, with an optimized lattice parameter of a = 25.25 Å. In the fully eclipsed configuration, the PV-COF layers are 4.03 Å apart along the c axis, according to the optimized model and corresponding to the broad peak centered at 2θ = 22.4° in the experimental PXRD pattern. As shown in Fig. 3, the simulated PXRD pattern of this model is in good agreement with the experimental data. Both the crystallinity and morphology were unaffected by acidic and basic pH (Fig. S7 and S8†).
Porosity, hydrothermal stability, cationic surface, and the ability to form both electrostatic and hydrogen bonds with oxoanions encouraged us to investigate the BrO3− adsorption capability of PV-COF. To mimic practical conditions in a full-scale drinking water plant, the starting BrO3− concentration was set at 50 μg L−1.29 In a typical experiment, PV-COF (5 mg) was incubated with a NaBrO3 solution (10 mL) and 1 mL aliquots were removed at different time points (1, 2, 5, 10, 15, and 20 min). These fractions were passed through a syringe filter (0.2 μm pore size) and residual solutions were analyzed with an HPLC coupled to a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (HPLC-QqQMS) to quantify the amount of BrO3− (details in the ESI†). We found a remarkable decrease in the stock concentration of BrO3− to less than 3 μg L−1 within 20 minutes of PV-COF treatment, which corresponded to over 95% removal (Fig. 4a). The rate constant for the adsorption process was determined by fitting the data to a pseudo-second order kinetic model30,31 and an adsorption rate of 191.45 g mg−1 min−1 was calculated with a correlation coefficient of ∼1, which is a value higher than that of any other reported adsorbent (Fig. 4b, c and Table S2†). The maximum BrO3− absorption capacity of PV-COF was estimated by an isotherm study using a range of bromate concentrations (12.5 to 200 mg L−1). We fitted the adsorption data to the Langmuir and Freundlich non-linear adsorption models,32,33 but a better fit was obtained with the former (R2 = 0.98 and 0.92, respectively). A Qmax of 203.8 mg g−1 was calculated (Fig. 4d and S9†), which is among the highest values reported to date for any class of BrO3− sorbents (Table S2†). The mechanism of BrO3− adsorption involves exchange of counter ions. The relative amounts of Cl and Br change from 32.9% and 0.0%, respectively, prior to adsorption (Fig. S2†) to 4.6% and 18.8%, respectively, post adsorption (Fig. S10†). This reduction in the relative amount of Cl and the increase in the amount of Br strongly suggest that Cl− counter ions are replaced by BrO3−. As a result of BrO3− adsorption, the total surface area of the material decreases to 30.0 m2 g−1 (Fig. S11†), the average particle diameter in solution increases to 2.2 μm because of swelling and the average surface charge decreases to +5.2 mV as a result of surface-adsorbed BrO3− (Fig. S12†).
To mimic the real-life conditions of adsorption, we performed experiments with commercial water samples to which NaBrO3 was added at 50 μg L−1. These samples contained other anions, typically in thousand times higher concentration ranges, including bicarbonate (0–182 mg L−1), sulfate (0–86 mg L−1), chloride (1.3–77 mg L−1), nitrate (0.3–1.1 mg L−1) and fluoride (0.1–0.5 mg L−1). In spite of the presence of competitive anionic species at high concentrations, PV-COF removed up to 93% of BrO3− in 20 minutes (Fig. 4e). The effect of pH on the adsorption was also tested and it was found that an acidic pH of 5 does not alter % removal in the first 20 minutes, but a basic pH of 8 decreases it to ∼70% (Fig. S13†). This can be explained by a partial loss of the cationic character of PV-COF: it is well known that bases reduce viologen units to radical cations,34 which have a lower affinity for bromate than dicationic viologens.
To evaluate the role that the network core units and surface modifications play in impacting BrO3− removal efficiency, we chemically modified the surface of PV-COF post-synthetically by: (1) metallating the porphyrin units with zinc metal ions (Zn-PV-COF, Fig. 1) which could potentially coordinate to bromate, or (2) chemically reducing the bipyridinium subunits using cobaltocene to neutralize the COF surface (Red-PV-COF, Fig. 1). Neither of the two modifications resulted in a change in the morphology as evidenced by SEM and TEM imaging (Fig. S14 and S15†). The average size of the particles remained the same for Zn-PV-COF (∼1.4 μm), whereas there was a slight decrease in the size for Red-PV-COF (∼1.2 μm), likely because of the loss of counterions (Fig. S16a and c†). EDS mapping confirmed an even distribution of the transition metal as well as other constituent elements throughout Zn-PV-COF (Fig. 2d). The ζ-potential of the metallated COF was measured to be +25.2 mV owing to the positively charged metal centers introduced (Fig. S16b†). Conversely, the ζ-potential for Red-PV-COF became negative and was measured to be −24.1 mV (Fig. S16d†). FT-IR spectra of Zn-PV-COF and Red-PV-COF showed –CN– vibration signals from the porphyrin subunit at 1603 cm−1, but the latter lacked a signal at 1630 cm−1 due to the loss of –CN– bonds following reduction of the bipyridinium units (Fig. S17†). In addition, Zn-PV-COF exhibited a strong signal at 1001 cm−1, shifted from 966 cm−1 in PV-COF. This indicated an interaction of the –C–N– bonds with the Zn metal center. Porosity and pore size distributions remained similar after metalation (Fig. S5c and d†), but reduction resulted in a significant increase in the surface area of Red-PV-COF to 306 m2 g−1 (Fig. S5e and f†). This can be explained by the removal of counter ions, which block some of the pores in PV-COF. Neither of chemical modifications imparted significant radical character to the material as evidenced by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra (Fig. S18†). The PXRD pattern of Zn-PV-COF and Red-PV-COF showed a broadening of the peak corresponding to the (200) plane with increased intensity and a reduced intensity of the peak corresponding to the (100) plane (Fig. S19†).
Having fully characterized the modified materials, BrO3− removal experiments were conducted as previously described. Adsorption rates were found to be 141.17 g mg−1 min−1 and 86.43 g mg−1 min−1 for Zn-PV-COF and Red-PV-COF, respectively (Fig. 4b). We hypothesized that the introduction of Zn atoms into the porphyrin cores may prevent the formation of hydrogen bonding between the core and BrO3−, which may effectively reduce the rate of adsorption. A molecular simulation of the interaction between BrO3− anions and the central porphyrin units indicated that the bromate anions might be forming H-bonds with the central porphyrin core (Fig. S20†). On the other hand, when considering the periodic PV-COF structure, the results of simulation on the BrO3− sorption sites indicated that bromate anions are primarily adsorbed by forming H-bonds with the hydrogen atoms of the porphyrin pyrrole groups that are pointing into the pores (Fig. S20†). This was experimentally confirmed by FT-IR analysis, where the –N–H vibrations at ∼3100 cm−1 almost disappear post-bromate adsorption (Fig. S21†). Although Zn could serve as a coordination center for anions, it also increased the molecular weight of the material, so the net effect was a reduction in the BrO3− adsorption rate. Similarly, neutralization of the bipyridinium subunit's cationic charge prevented the formation of electrostatic ion-paired interactions between the sorbent and BrO3−, the net effect of which reduced the adsorption rate even more dramatically. These results suggest that electrostatic interactions play a major role in the adsorption process. In terms of maximum uptake capacity for BrO3−, Zn-PV-COF and Red-PV-COF do not perform as extraordinarily as PV-COF, but Zn-PV-COF nevertheless has one of the highest reported Qmax values at 123.60 mg g−1 (Fig. 4d).
Finally, we tested the regeneration ability of the best-performing PV-COF. Adsorbed BrO3− could be desorbed by simple washing with a 40 mM solution of NaOH followed by neutralization with 10 mM HCl, as previously reported (details in the ESI†).35 We tested our material for three consecutive cycles without significant loss of adsorption efficiency at both lower (50 μg L−1) and higher (50 mg L−1) BrO3− concentrations (Fig. 4f and S22†). Furthermore, PV-COF preserved its morphology after the three cycles of adsorption (Fig. S23†). Additionally, no significant changes in the fingerprint region of the FT-IR spectrum of the material were observed (Fig. S24†), and crystalline nature was preserved (Fig. S25†). Because remediation of ground and drinking water typically involves packed-bed columns,36 we also conducted adsorption and regeneration experiments in the continuous flow setup (details in the ESI, Fig. S26†). The concentration of BrO3− was decreased from 50 μg L−1 to below the detection limit for three consecutive cycles of adsorption.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c9sc04663a |
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