Abstract

Highly selective and efficient removal of ionic pollutants, including ionic organic compounds and heavy metal ions from water, is still a huge challenge due to the complex nature of polluted water. To meet this challenge, we presented the synthesis of bifunctionalized polyethyleneimine-based sponges through cryo-polymerization via BDDE as the crosslinker followed by bifunctional modification with glycidyl trimethylammonium chloride (GTAC) and phenyl glycidyl ether (PGE), which simultaneously afford quaternary ammonium cation (strongly basic and hydrophilic) and phenyl (hydrophobic) functionalities, respectively. As a result, a hybrid hydrophilic-hydrophobic sponge is generated that could stably be suspended underwater due to the co-operative effect of the water-absorbing hydrophilic domain and the hydrophobic domain generating buoyancy. The quaternized and phenyl-functionalized PEI-based sponge (SQP-PEI) demonstrated highly selective and efficient removal of anionic pollutants from water, including diclofenac sodium (DIC), methyl orange (MO) and chromium (Cr(VI)) with co-existing interferences. The Langmuir isotherms revealed the maximum adsorption capacities of 342.7 mg/g, 491.9 mg/g, and 242.7 mg/g for DIC, MO, and Cr(VI), respectively. The studies of adsorption mechanism suggested that the bifunctional SQP-PEI sponge indeed afford both strong anion-exchange interaction and π–π interaction toward organic pollutants DIC and MO, and the strong anion-exchange interaction can be the dominated adsorption mechanism for anionic DIC, MO and Cr(VI) species. The suspended SQP-PEI also demonstrated excellent reusability, which shows the potential of SQP-PEI for real applications.

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