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Renewable Adsorbents for Selective Phosphorus Removal: Co(OH) 2 -Derived ZIF-67 on Anion Exchange Resin.

Wei ZhuRuoding WangQiong TangZepeng ZhangZhonglong YinZhen YangWeiben Yang
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2023)
Metal organic framework (MOF)-based adsorbents are appealing for removing low-concentration phosphates with interfering ions in wastewater purification, a new strategy developed to maintain the good activity of metal sites. Here, ZIF-67 was immobilized onto the porous surface of anion exchange resin (D-201) with a high loading amount of 22.0 wt % by a modifiable Co(OH) 2 template. We observed that the removal rate of low-concentration phosphate (2 mg P/L) by ZIF-67/D-201 nanocomposites was 98.6%, and more than 90% phosphate adsorption capacity was still maintained, with 5 times molar concentration of interfering ions in the solution. Moreover, after six times of regeneration by solvothermal reaction in the ligand solution, the structure of ZIF-67 was better preserved in D-201 with more than 90% phosphate removal rate. ZIF-67/D-201 could be employed effectively in fixed-bed adsorption runs. By the analysis of experiment and characterization, we found that during the adsorption-regeneration process of ZIF-67/D-201 for phosphate, reversible structural transformation of ZIF-67 and Co 3 (PO 4 ) 2 occurred in D-201. In general, the study reported a new method to develop MOF adsorbents for wastewater treatment.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • wastewater treatment
  • aqueous solution
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