Abstract
With the aim to develop chemical adsorbents that are inherently nontoxic to living beings and the environment, a gel system based on thiol–norbornene photoclick chemistry was developed. Norbornene was strategically functionalized with different poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) chains to produce PEG-functionalized macromonomers. The influence of incorporating PEG in the cross-linked network was evaluated on the basis of its physical properties and dye-removing efficiency from aqueous solutions. The excellent swelling ability of the gels in organic solvents was found to improve with the PEG chain length. The rheological measurements of the as-synthesized materials also exhibited the presence of elasticity in the network, and a decrease in storage and loss moduli was observed with an increase in PEG molecular weight. The materials possess excellent thermal stability, which enhanced with an increase in PEG chain length, as revealed from thermogravimetric analysis (TGA). Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) studies revealed the tendency of higher-molecular-weight PEG to form a crystalline phase in the network. Kinetic studies of dye removal from aqueous solutions by the as-prepared cross-linked networks indicate that the dye removal proceeds via pseudo-second-order kinetics. The study of adsorption isotherm of the removal process indicates that the adsorption follows the Langmuir isotherm model. In this present work, we have thoroughly evaluated the influence of PEG chain length on several physical properties and toxic cationic dye removal efficiencies of thiol–norbornene photo-cross-linked networks.
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