Abstract

Efficient treatment of wastewater contaminated with carcinogenic Cr(VI) has been a long-term challenge for both academic and industrial research efforts. Removal of Cr(VI) species by ion exchange is a relatively simple and efficient method, and its combination with highly tailorable nanomaterials is promising for the treatment of such wastewater. Here, we report a type of cationic porous organic polymer (POP), namely, PTPA-PIP, which can be prepared simply by converting the corresponding aromatic polyamine PTPA to its protonated form, thereby significantly increasing its hydrophilicity and ability to disperse homogeneously in water, crucial for application in water treatment. In addition to detailed characterization of the physicochemical properties of PTPA-PIP (including using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET), and solid-state NMR techniques), adsorption experiments demonstrate that PTPA-PIP removes low-concentration dichromate anions with very high performance, including excellent exchange capacity (maximum capacity of 230 mg Cr2O7 2-/g PTPA-PIP), ultrafast removal (initial adsorption rate of 83 mg g-1 min-1), excellent selectivity (∼10% loss of adsorption capacity in the presence of 40-fold concentration of competing anions), as well as superior reusability (reusable for at least 5 cycles without compromised performance). These results demonstrate that PTPA-PIP is an outstanding candidate for application in industrial settings for the effective removal of harmful Cr(VI) pollutants in wastewater.

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