Reduction of a Tetrafluoroterephthalonitrile‐β‐Cyclodextrin Polymer to Remove Anionic Micropollutants and Perfluorinated Alkyl Substances from Water

Abstract

Organic micropollutants (MPs) are anthropogenic substances that contaminate water resources at trace concentrations. Many MPs, including per‐ and polyfluorinated alkyl substances (PFASs), have come under increased scrutiny because of their environmental persistence and association with various health problems. A β‐cyclodextrin polymer linked with tetrafluoroterephthalonitrile (TFN‐CDP) has high affinity for cationic and many neutral MPs from contaminated water because of anionic groups incorporated during the polymerization. But TFN‐CDP does not bind many anionic MPs strongly, including anionic PFASs. To address this shortcoming, we reduced the nitrile groups in TFN‐CDP to primary amines, which reverses its affinity towards charged MPs. TFN‐CDP exhibits adsorption distribution coefficients (log KD values) of 2–3 for cationic MPs and −0.5–1.5 for anionic MPs, whereas the reduced TFN‐CDP exhibits log KD values of −0.5–1.5 for cationic MPs and 2–4 for anionic MPs, with especially high affinity towards anionic PFASs. Kinetic studies of the removal of 10 anionic PFASs at environmentally relevant concentrations showed 80–98 % removal of all contaminants after 30 min and was superior to commercial granular activated carbon. These findings demonstrate the scope and tunability of CD‐based adsorbents derived from a single polymerization and the promise of novel adsorbents constructed from molecular receptors.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jul 24, 2019
Source ID
10.1002/ange.201905142

Entities

People

  • Casey Ching
  • Congyue Wu
  • Damian E Helbling
  • Leilei Xiao
  • Max Klemes
  • William Dichtel
  • Yuhan Ling

Organizations

  • Cornell University
  • National Science Foundation
  • Northwestern University
  • Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Groundwater Contamination Remediation.
  • Organic Chemistry