| Literature DB >> 32942756 |
Agnieszka Głowińska1, Andrzej W Trochimczuk1.
Abstract
Efficient seEntities:
Keywords: chelating resins; ion exchange resins; organophosphorus polymers; phosphorus-containing polymers; separation processes
Year: 2020 PMID: 32942756 PMCID: PMC7571143 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25184236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Bond energies of chosen phosphorus-containing linkages [3].
| Bond | Bond Energy [kJ/mol] |
|---|---|
| P-H | 322 |
| P-P | 209 |
| P-C | 272 |
| P-O | 360 |
| P=O | 586 |
| P-N | 230 |
| P=C | 578 |
| P≡P | 490 |
| P=N | 687 |
| P-Cl | 321 |
| P-F | 527 |
| P-I | 184 |
| P-Br | 264 |
Scheme 1Synthesis of a phosphoric acid polymer by direct polymerization of functionalized monomer based on the example of 2-methacryoyloxyethyl phosphate.
Scheme 2Schematic representation of Atom Transfer Radical Polymerization (ATRP) (X—halide: Br or Cl, M—transition metal, L—complexing ligand, Y—oxidation state, kact—activation rate constant, kdeact—deactivation rate constant, kp —propagation rate constant) based on the example of phosphonic acid monomer.
Scheme 3Schematic representation of a reversible addition fragmentation transfer (RAFT) process based on the example of methacryloyloxymethyl phosphonate using dithioester chain transfer agent (Z—a group that modifies addition and fragmentation rates, R—a good homolytic leaving group and a good initiating species).
Scheme 4Schematic representation of cellulose phosphorylation [5].
Scheme 5Phosphorylation with phosphoryl chloride based on the example of poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate).
Scheme 6Preparation of phosphoric acid resin from poly(glycidyl methacrylate-co-divinylbenzene) [40].
Scheme 7Schematic representation of Perkow reaction.
Scheme 8Schematic representation of a three-step synthesis resulting in monomers with phosphoric acid moieties [42].
Scheme 9Synthesis of phosphonic acid polymers via Friedel-Crafts reaction based on the example of polystyrene-employing reaction.
Scheme 10Synthesis of phosphonic acid compounds via Arbuzov reaction (R—alkyl, aryl etc., R’—alkyl, acyl etc., Hal—Cl, Br, I) [50].
Scheme 11Schematic representation of phosphonate preparation from alcohols proposed by Barney et al. [55].
Scheme 12Synthesis of phosphonic acid compounds via Michaelis-Becker reaction.
Scheme 13Cross-coupling reaction using palladium complex as a catalyst based on the example of aryl halide (X—Br, I) [62].
Scheme 14Mannich reaction based on the example of diethylenetriamine resin [63].
Scheme 15Schemes of aminothiophosphonate resins synthesis: 1—amine, 2—diethyl thiophosphonochloridate, 3—sodium diethyl malonate [66].
Scheme 16Schematic representation of Pudovik reaction (R, R1—H, alkyl, aryl, R2—alkyl, aryl) [67].
Scheme 17Synthesis of VPA monomer (1). R = H, alkyl group of 1–6 carbon atoms.
Scheme 18Synthesis of VPA monomer (2).
Scheme 19Polystyrene modification using phosphorus chloride and Friedel-Crafts catalyst.
Scheme 20Synthesis route of the phenylphosphinic acid resin [72].
Figure 1From the left: resin with phosphonic and sulfonic functional groups [51], phosphonic and amino groups [99], phosphonic and various carboxylic groups [100].
Scheme 21Synthesis of Diphonix® [4].
Scheme 22Schematic representation of molecular imprinting using phosphoric acid monomer (Men+—metal ion).
The application of organophosphorus resin in separation processes—a collection of chosen papers.
| P-Containing Functional Group | Polymer | Application/Features | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| ‘Phosphoric acid | Cellulose phosphate | Sorption from 4N-acid: high affinity for Th4+, Ti4+, U4+, Ce4+, Fe3+, ZrO2+, UO22+ | [ |
| Cation exchanger in calcium-hydrogen cycle | [ | ||
| Adsorption of proteins | [ | ||
| Poly(glycidyl methacrylate- | Selective resins (lithium adsorbed in preference to sodium and potassium, better adsorption of hard-Lewis cations from acidic media, highest selectivity towards lead) | [ | |
| Poly(glycidyl methacrylate- | Resins with high cation exchange capacity, salt splitting capacity, and adsorption capacity for Cu2+, Zn2+, Cd2+, Ca2+, and Ag+; RGP obtained from poly(glycidyl methacrylate) – high adsorption capacity for Al3+, Fe3+, and UO22+; phosphoric acid functionalization – higher selective adsorption for Li+ than for Na+ | [ | |
| Phosphonic acid | D2EHPA/TOPO impregnated resins, ion exchange resin containing aminophosphonic acid groups | Uranium removal – D2EHPA/TOPO resins are not affected by the presence of Fe2+, which reduces uranium to the tetravalent oxidation state, prevents uranium sorption. | [ |
| α-, β -, and γ-ketophosphonate polymer-supported resins | Sorption of metal ions (Eu(III), Cu(II), Pb(II), Cd(II), Co(II), Ag(II)) from nitric acid | [ | |
| Bifunctional ion-exchange resins synthesized from vinylbenzyl chloride– styrene copolymers: Arbuzov reaction followed by sulfonation | Eu(III) sorption from acidic solutions | [ | |
| Non-ionic phosphorylated resin diethyl polystyrene-methylenephosphonate (EPMP) | Selective adsorption of hexavalent uranium | [ | |
| Bifunctional aminomethylphosphonic acid resins (Mannich reaction) | Sorption of Cu(II), Cd(II), Pb(II), and Eu(III)—cadmium ion complexation shows the greatest bifunctional effect, | [ | |
| Ion-exchange/chelating resins with aminomethylphosphonate groups (Fields-Kabatschnik reaction) | The removal of Cu(II), Cd(II), Ni(II), and Zn(II) | [ | |
| Diphonix® | Uranium removal (after 2h—20.7%, 24h—18.0% from 40% H3PO4) | [ | |
| Actinides ion removal from very acidic solutions | [ | ||
| Uptake of various transition and post-transition metal ions; a very high affinity for Fe(III) and Cr(III) in very acidic solutions | [ | ||
| Gallium(III) and indium(III) recovery | [ | ||
| Chelating diphosphonic acid groups are grafted to a silica support to overcome some of the problems associated with the stripping of actinide elements from the resin (Diphosil) | [ | ||
| Diphonix A – additional strong base anion exchange groups; the uptake of Se(IV), tri-, tetra- and hexa-valent actinides and pertechnetate anions | [ | ||
| The of uptake of several actinide ions [Am(III), U(VI), Th(IV), Np(IV) and Pu(IV)] and of some transition-metal ions [Co(II), Zn(II), Fe(III) and Cr(III)] at tracer concentration level; | [ | ||
| Bifunctional resin consisting of phosphonic acid and quaternary amine groups | Sorption of barium, calcium, silver cations; changing the associated anion allows for control of the ionic recognition process | [ | |
| Poly(vinylbenzyl chloride- | Eu(III) sorption; highly selective resins with rapid complexation kinetics: 99.7% Eu(III) complexed from a 1M nitric acid solution with a 30-min contact time | [ | |
| Diphosphonate | Chelating resin with diphosphonate groups synthesized from the tetraethylester of 1,1-vinylidenediphosphonic acid | Eu(III) sorption: sulfonic acid ion exchange resin complexes 14.3% Eu(III), diphosphonate-based polymer complexes 96.5% from a 1N HNO3/0.4N NaNO3 solution | [ |
| Phosphate and phosphonate diesters | Polymer-supported phosphonate and phosphate diester ligands | The complexation of uranium(VI) e.g., the expanded gel resin - phosphorylated pentaerythritol: 99% complexation within 20 min | [ |
| Polystyrene-divinylbenzene matrix with methylenediphosphonate, carboxylate, and sulfonate functional groups | Exceptionally high affinity for polyvalent cations even from moderately acidic aqueous media | [ | |
| Phosphonic acid, phosphonate ester | Resins with phosphonic acid/phosphonate ester ligands and phosphonic acid/tertiary amine ligand on PS support | Americum extraction | [ |
| Phosphonates, phosphinic acid | Bifunctional polymer resins (I DMBP, II DMBP, compared with monofunctional resins) | Metal-specific reactions, polymers with high level of ionic recognition; phosphinic ligands—ability to control the recognition mechanism through the reduction reaction with Hg(II); phosphonic resin—sorption of Ag, Hg and Fe in different conditions—high complexation of Fe; complexation of Fe is adversely affected by the presence of diester ligands | [ |
| Phosphinic acid | Bifunctional phosphinic acid ion-exchange/redox resins | Dual mechanism sorption (ion-exchange and metal-ion reduction) of Ag(I) and Hg(II): after a 9-h contact time with Ag(I) ions and a 2-h contact time with Hg(II) ions all of the primary acid sites are oxidized | [ |
| Phenylphosphinic acid resins (Michael reaction) | the removal of Cu(II), Cd(II), Ni(II), Zn(II), Mg(II) and Ca(II) from nitric acid solutions | [ | |
| Dihydroxyphosphino- and/or phosphono groups | The macroreticular chelating resins containing dihydroxy-phosphino and/or phosphono groups | Recovery of uranium from sea water—e.g., the average recovery ratios of uranium from sea water with Na-form and H-form RCSP on 10 recycles: 84.9% and 90.5%, respectively | [ |