| Literature DB >> 32413965 |
Radwa M Ashour1,2, Ahmed F Abdel-Magied1,2, Qiong Wu3, Richard T Olsson3, Kerstin Forsberg1.
Abstract
Metal organic frameworks (MOFs) are porous crystalline materials that can be designed to act as selective adsorbents. Due to their high porosity they can possess very high adsorption capacities. However, overcoming the brittleness of these crystalline materials is a challenge for many industrial applications. In order to make use of MOFs for large-scale liquid phase separation processes they can be immobilized on solid supports. For this purpose, nanocellulose can be considered as a promising supporting material due to its high flexibility and biocompatibility. In this study a novel flexible nanocellulose MOF composite material was synthesised in aqueous media by a novel and straightforward in situ one-pot green method. The material consisted of MOF particles of the type MIL-100(Fe) (from Material Institute de Lavoisier, containing Fe(III) 1,3,5-benzenetricarboxylate) immobilized onto bacterial cellulose (BC) nanofibers. The novel nanocomposite material was applied to efficiently separate arsenic and Rhodamine B from aqueous solution, achieving adsorption capacities of 4.81, and 2.77 mg g‒1, respectively. The adsorption process could be well modelled by the nonlinear pseudo-second-order fitting.Entities:
Keywords: adsorption; bacterial cellulose; metal organic framework; nanocomposite
Year: 2020 PMID: 32413965 PMCID: PMC7285363 DOI: 10.3390/polym12051104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Scheme 1General procedure for preparation of the MIL-100(Fe)@BC nanocomposite.
Figure 1(a) and (b) SEM image of hybrid MIL-100(Fe)@BC nanocomposite (BTC/Fe(III) = 120), (c) Brunauer‒Emmett‒Teller (BET) analysis of MIL-100(Fe)@BC (BTC/Fe(III) = 120), and (d) thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) of bacterial cellulose (BC) and MIL-100(Fe)@BC.
Figure 2Adsorption capacity versus time, and the nonlinear pseudo-second-order fitting for the adsorption of As(III) (a); and Rhodamine B (b) on MIL-100(Fe)@BC nanocomposite, respectively. The inset shows a photograph of the Rhodamine B aqueous solutions before and after the adsorption process.
Comparison of As(III) and Rhodamine B removal with other reported adsorbents.
| Adsorbents | qe (mg g−1) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| MIL-53(Al)-graphene oxide | 65.0 | [ |
| Surfactant-modified montmorillonite | 1.48 | [ |
| Magnetic pinecone biomass | 18.02 | [ |
| Zn-MOF | 49.50 | [ |
| MIL-100(Fe) | 120 | [ |
| MIL-100(Fe)@BC | 4.81 | This work |
|
| ||
| Hypercross-linked polymeric adsorbent | 2.1 | [ |
| Mango leaf power | 3.31 | [ |
| Zn-MOF | 3.750 | [ |
| Fe3O4/MIL-100(Fe) | 28.36 | [ |
| MIL-100(Fe)@BC | 2.77 | This work |