Abstract

Porous materials have recently been explored as highly effective photosensitizers for the photocatalytic detoxification of sulfur mustard. However, most porous material-based photosensitizers are reliant on heavy-metal effects and require non-realistic light sources and O2-enriched atmosphere to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS). To overcome such health problems and practical limitations, we here report a porous organic polymer (POP) photosensitizer (KUP-3) with a protonated imidazoline core, notably showing the generation of types I and II ROS. Owing to its robust framework, KUP-3 can be incorporated into fabrics or melamine sponges via in situ polymerization. The composite-based photocatalysts ([email protected] and [email protected]) exhibit protective and decontamination effects along with the photocatalytic detoxification, even under sunlight irradiation and ambient atmosphere, which is beneficial in real-world applications. This study demonstrates the design and fabrication strategy of a class of POP-based composite materials to enable practical applications for photocatalytic detoxification.

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