Abstract

One of the biggest problems worldwide is the pollution of natural water bodies by dyes coming from effluents used in the textile industry. In the quest for novel effluent treatment alternatives, the aim of this work was to immobilize Fe(III) complexes in molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) to produce efficient Fenton-like heterogeneous catalysts for the green oxidative degradation of the methyl orange (MO) dye pollutant. Different metal complexes bearing commercial and low-cost ligands were assayed and their catalytic activity levels towards the discoloration of MO by H2O2 were assessed. The best candidates were Fe(III)-BMPA (BMPA = di-(2-picolyl)amine) and Fe(III)-NTP (NTP = 3,3′,3″-nitrilotripropionic acid), displaying above 70% MO degradation in 3 h. Fe(III)-BMPA caused the oxidative degradation through two first-order stages, related to the formation of BMPA-Fe-OOH and the generation of reactive oxygen species. Only the first of these stages was detected for Fe(III)-NTP. Both complexes were then employed to imprint catalytic cavities into MIPs. The polymers showed catalytic profiles that were highly dependent on the crosslinking agent employed, with N,N-methylenebisacrylamide (MBAA) being the crosslinker that rendered polymers with optimal oxidative performance (>95% conversion). The obtained ion-imprinted polymers constitute cheap and robust solid matrices, with the potential to be coupled to dye-containing effluent treatment systems with synchronous H2O2 injection.

Highlights

  • We explored for the first time molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) as supporting phases to develop new Fenton-like heterogeneous catalysts capable of promoting the green oxidative degradation of the azo dye methyl orange (Figure 1)

  • The iron(III) complexes were generated in situ in the aqueous solution from an equimolar mix of the metal ion and the ligands

  • In order to deepen in the characterization of the Fe(III) homogeneous catalysts, we evaluated the kinetic parameters and mechanistic details of the methyl orange (MO) oxidative degradation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

To keep up with that requirement, the global economy and industrial technology have rapidly developed, leading to a sustained increase in the pollution of ecosystems. The quality of natural waters is in continuous decline, mainly due to the flourishing of industries that use dyes, such as those that produce fabrics, paper, cosmetics, plastics, rubber, leather, pharmaceuticals, and food [1,2]. Within this global context, huge amounts of polluting dyes are discharged into natural waters [3]. Uruguay, dyes reach natural water reservoirs as well, mainly from the leather and textile industries [5,6]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call