Abstract

In this work, we introduce the use of MOFs immobilized on cotton fabrics as a sorbent phase for the fabric phase sorptive extraction and passive sampling of non-polar organic compounds from water samples. A water-stable, Zr4+-based MOF (UiO-66(Zr)-NH2) was irreversibly immobilized on polydopamine decorated cotton through a step-wise synthetic procedure that maximized the amount of MOF immobilized on the fabric surface. In this manner it was possible to combine the permeability and the large contact surface area of the host cotton substrate with the high specific surface area and sorption capacity of the MOF. The MOF@cotton composite was used as a new sorbent phase for the fabric phase sorptive extraction of UV filters, as model organic compounds, not only under static (i.e. stirring assisted) but also in dynamic, flow-through extraction mode (i.e. as a solid phase extraction sorbent phase), producing satisfactory analytical results in terms of linearity of calibration curves (10–250 µg L−1), precision (<11%), detection limits <10 µg L−1 (using a single wavelength UV detector) and recoveries (86 - 119%) from various natural water samples. As a passive sampling sorbent phase, the MOF@cotton composite could linearly accumulate UV filters over time period of 35 days with sampling rates from 0.026 to 0.352 L d−1, which are comparable to other passive sampling sorbent phases.

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