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Porous amorphous metal-organic frameworks based on heterotopic triangular ligands for iodine and high-capacity dye adsorption. | LitMetric

Porous amorphous metal-organic frameworks based on heterotopic triangular ligands for iodine and high-capacity dye adsorption.

Dalton Trans

GDMPA Key Laboratory for Process Control and Quality Evaluation of Chiral Pharmaceuticals, And Guangzhou Key Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry for Biomedicine, School of Chemistry, South China Normal University, Guangzhou 510006, China.

Published: August 2023

The research on amorphous metal-organic frameworks (aMOFs) is still in its infancy, and designing and constructing aMOFs with functional pores remains a challenge. Two aMOFs based on Co(II) and heterotopic triangular ligands with large conjugated aromatic planes, namely aMOF-1 and aMOF-2, were constructed and characterized by IR, XPS, EA, ICP, XANS and so on. aMOF-1 possesses mesopores, whereas aMOF-2 possesses micropores. The porosity, conjugated aromatic plane and uncoordinated N atoms in the framework allow these aMOFs to adsorb iodine and dyes. The iodine adsorption capacity of aMOF-1 is 3.3 g per g, which is higher than that of aMOF-2 (0.56 g per g), mainly due to the expansion or swelling of aMOF-1 after iodine adsorption. The uptake of cationic dyes by aMOF-2 showed more rapid kinetics and a higher removal rate than that by aMOF-1, mainly due to the difference in the porosity and surface charge. Although the surface charges of aMOF-1 and aMOF-2 are negative, both of them showed significantly faster adsorption kinetics toward anionic dyes, among which methyl orange (MO) and Congo red (CR) can be removed in 5 min. This occurs possibly because the quick adsorption of Na ions alters the surface charge of the framework and promotes dye uptake. The adsorption capacities of aMOF-1 for MO and CR reached 921 and 2417 mg g, respectively. The correlation data for aMOF-2 are 1042 and 1625 mg g, respectively. All adsorption capacities are among the highest compared to many cMOFs. Adsorption in mixed dye solution is found to be charge-dependent, kinetic-dependent, and synergetic in these systems. The porosity, surface charge regulation during adsorption, weak interactions and multiple adsorption processes contribute to the dye adsorption performance.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3dt01350bDOI Listing

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