Abstract
Pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) pose a significant wastewater pollution concern. While electrochemical oxidation is promising, it struggles with slow mass transfer. To address this, we propose a novel strategy utilizing bifunctional metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) that couple an adsorbent with an electrocatalyst. The real active sites within iron-based MOFs responsible for the adsorption of PPCPs are MIL-101(Fe) molecules, while the in-situ formed active sites, α-FeOOH, accelerate the charge transfer under bias, contributing to the electrooxidation of PPCPs. The rapid destruction of adsorbed organics on the dual-functional electrode surface enables to release adsorption sites. This, in turn, paves the way for fast and efficient re-adsorption of PPCPs molecules, consequently promoting mass transfer. Iron-based MOFs exhibit excellent adsorption capacity (∼60 mg g−1 for sulfosalicylic acid, ∼15 mg g−1 for acetaminophen) and electrooxidation ability (94 % removal in 2 h, 31.2 kWh kg−1 COD) with good stability in realistic pharmaceutical wastewater treatment. This study offers a novel strategy for removing PPCPs using molecular electrocatalysts and provides new insights for designing and constructing MOFs for refractory wastewater treatment.
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