4.8 Article

Twistedly hydrophobic basis with suitable aromatic metrics in covalent organic networks govern micropollutant decontamination

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42513-x

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The pre-designable structure and unique architectures of covalent organic frameworks (COFs) make them attractive as active and porous medium for water crisis. However, the regulation of interfacial behavior in advanced oxidation decontamination using functional basis with different metrics remains challenging. In this study, different molecular interfaces were pre-designed and fabricated to achieve high removal rates for micropollutants by breaking through the adsorption energy barrier and promoting inner-surface renewal.
The pre-designable structure and unique architectures of covalent organic frameworks (COFs) render them attractive as active and porous medium for water crisis. However, the effect of functional basis with different metrics on the regulation of interfacial behavior in advanced oxidation decontamination remains a significant challenge. In this study, we pre-design and fabricate different molecular interfaces by creating ordered pi skeletons, incorporating different pore sizes, and engineering hydrophilic or hydrophobic channels. These synergically break through the adsorption energy barrier and promote inner-surface renewal, achieving a high removal rate for typical antibiotic contaminants (like levofloxacin) by BTT-DATP-COF, compared with BTT-DADP-COF and BTT-DAB-COF. The experimental and theoretical calculations reveal that such functional basis engineering enable the hole-driven levofloxacin oxidation at the interface of BTT fragments to occur, accompanying with electron-mediated oxygen reduction on terphenyl motif to active radicals, endowing it facilitate the balanced extraction of holes and electrons. The synergetic regulation of the electronic structure and interfacial reaction of covalent organic frameworks (COF) for water purification remains a challenge. Here the authors propose that COFs materials possessing molecular interfaces with ordered pi skeletons, suitable pore size, and hydrophilic/hydrophobic channels synergically break through the adsorption energy barrier achieving high removal rates for micropollutants.

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