| Literature DB >> 31367318 |
Sumin Lee1, Adam Uliana2, Mercedes K Taylor1, Khetpakorn Chakarawet1, Siva Rama Satyam Bandaru3, Sheraz Gul4, Jun Xu2, Cheri M Ackerman1, Ruchira Chatterjee4, Hiroyasu Furukawa1, Jeffrey A Reimer2,5, Junko Yano4, Ashok Gadgil3, Gary J Long6, Fernande Grandjean6, Jeffrey R Long1,2,5, Christopher J Chang1,7,8.
Abstract
Iron is one of the most abundant elements in the environment and in the human body. As an essential nutrient, iron homeostasis is tightly regulated, and iron dysregulation is implicated in numerous pathologies, including neuro-degenerative diseases, atherosclerosis, and diabetes. Endogenous iron pool concentrations are directly linked to iron ion uptake from environmental sources such as drinking water, providing motivation for developing new technologies for assessing iron(ii) and iron(iii) levels in water. However, conventional methods for measuring aqueous iron pools remain laborious and costly and often require sophisticated equipment and/or additional processing steps to remove the iron ions from the original environmental source. We now report a simplified and accurate chemical platform for capturing and quantifying the iron present in aqueous samples through use of a post-synthetically modified porous aromatic framework (PAF). The ether/thioether-functionalized network polymer, PAF-1-ET, exhibits high selectivity for the uptake of iron(ii) and iron(iii) over other physiologically and environmentally relevant metal ions. Mössbauer spectroscopy, XANES, and EXAFS measurements provide evidence to support iron(iii) coordination to oxygen-based ligands within the material. The polymer is further successfully employed to adsorb and remove iron ions from groundwater, including field sources in West Bengal, India. Combined with an 8-hydroxyquinoline colorimetric indicator, PAF-1-ET enables the simple and direct determination of the iron(ii) and iron(iii) ion concentrations in these samples, providing a starting point for the design and use of molecularly-functionalized porous materials for potential dual detection and remediation applications.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31367318 PMCID: PMC6624977 DOI: 10.1039/c9sc01441a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1(a) Synthesis of PAF-1–ET. (b) Solid-state 13C NMR spectra of PAF-1–CH2Cl and PAF-1–ET illustrating new 13C chemical shifts arising from the –CH2OCH2CH2SCH3 group in PAF-1–ET (73, 48, 39, and 17 ppm) compared with a shift at 43 ppm for the –CH2Cl group in PAF-1–CH2Cl. (c) Nitrogen adsorption isotherms of PAF-1, PAF-1–CH2Cl, and PAF-1–ET measured at 77 K. Closed and open symbols represent adsorption and desorption results, respectively.
Fig. 2(a) Iron(iii) adsorption isotherm for PAF-1–ET (blue squares) and PAF-1–CH2Cl (red circles) obtained for solutions of (NH4)2Fe(SO4)2 dissolved in 100 mM HEPES buffer solution (pH = 6.7, initial iron concentrations ranging from 10–3 to 275 mg L–1). Black lines represent fits obtained using a Langmuir model. (b) Adsorption by PAF-1–ET of several physiologically-relevant metal ions dissolved in 100 mM HEPES buffer solution at pH = 6.7 (initial concentrations of 0.3, 2, and 20 mg L–1). In the case of iron(iii), one equivalent of citric acid was also added to the solution to prevent precipitation of Fe(OH)3.
Fig. 3(a) Iron(iii) adsorption by PAF-1–ET measured by ICP-MS in 100 mM HEPES (pH = 6.7) aqueous solutions using FeCl3 as the iron(iii) source. (b) Absorption spectra resulting from the addition of a 1 mM aqueous solution of 8-hydroxyquinoline to dried PAF-1–ET, obtained after exposure to the iron(iii) aqueous solutions shown in (a). The top red spectrum corresponds to the absorption of a complex of iron(iii) and 8-hydroxyquinoline, and the gray absorption spectra with increasing absorbance at 460 nm correspond to the solutions in (a) with increasing initial concentrations of iron(iii). (c) A close correlation was observed between the iron(iii) uptake measured by ICP-MS (gray squares) and the iron(iii) uptake obtained from the absorbance at 460 nm in the presence of the 8-hydroxyquinoline indicator (open circles).
Fig. 4Iron-57 Mössbauer spectra of PAF-1–ET obtained at (a) 100 and (b) 5 K. Red and green fits were assigned to iron(iii) (91%) and iron(ii) (9%), respectively. The total fit is shown in black. (c) The Fourier transform of the k3-weighted iron K-edge EXAFS data of iron(iii) adsorbed in PAF-1–ET (black dots); the best two-shell fit (red curve) was achieved with an immediate coordination environment of six O atoms at a distance of 2.00(1) Å and 12 C atoms at a distance of 3.06(4) Å; (inset) room-temperature XANES spectra obtained at the iron K-edge for PAF-1–ET (red curve) and Fe2O3, FeO, and Fe foil (gray, blue, and black curves, respectively).
Fig. 5(a) Adsorbed iron(iii) by PAF-1–ET in synthetic groundwater (initial iron concentrations were prepared as 1.8, 4.7, 6.7, and 37 mg L–1 using (NH4)2Fe(SO4)2 and groundwater collected in West Bengal, India16 (iron(iii) concentration of 14 mg L–1). For each measurement, 5 mL of each water sample were combined with 5 mL of citric acid solution (10–15 mg mL–1) and 2 mg of PAF-1–ET. (b) Absorption spectra after 8-hydroxyquinoline addition to dried PAF-1–ET samples following exposure to the corresponding groundwater samples in (a); (inset) time-dependent uptake of iron(iii) from the genuine groundwater sample fit to a single exponential decay y = Ae– + C (black line), yielding parameters A = 9.2(3) mg L–1, C = 4.1(1) mg L–1, and t0 = 12(1) min. (c) Comparison of direct iron(iii) measurements by ICP-MS (black squares) and calculated iron(iii) concentrations determined from the absorbance at 460 nm in the presence of 8-hydroxyquinoline indicator (open circles).