4.7 Article

Metal organic framework-derived recyclable magnetic coral Co@Co3O4/C for adsorptive removal of antibiotics from wastewater

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 30, Issue 17, Pages 50520-50536

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-023-25846-4

Keywords

MOF; Coral nanostructures; Magnetic; Antibiotics; Adsorption

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The absence of efficient antibiotic removal processes in conventional waste water treatment methods has increased the threat of antibiotic contamination to humanity. We report the synthesis of coral-like Co@Co3O4/C nanohybrids for the remediation of three different classes of antibiotics. These nanohybrids exhibit attractive porous structure and superior magnetic responses, achieving a high removal efficiency of 99.98% for nalidixic acid within 120 minutes. The adsorbent also shows reusability for four cycles without significant change in removal efficiency, indicating its potential for wide range antibiotic removal and hassle-free magnetic separation.
The menace posed by antibiotic contamination to humanity has increased due to the absence of efficient antibiotic removal processes in the conventional waste water treatment methods from the hospitals, households, animal husbandry, and pharma industry. Importantly, only a few commercially available adsorbents are magnetic, porous, and have the ability to selectively bind and separate various classes of antibiotics from the slurries. Herein, we report the synthesis of a coral-like Co@Co3O4/C nanohybrid for the remediation of three different classes of antibiotics - quinolone, tetracycline, and sulphonamide. The coral like Co@Co3O4/C materials are synthesized via a facile room temperature wet chemical method followed by annealing in a controlled atmosphere. The materials demonstrate an attractive porous structure with an excellent surface-to-mass ratio of 554.8 m(2) g(-1) alongside superior magnetic responses. A time-varying adsorption study of aqueous nalidixic acid solution on Co@Co3O4/C nanohybrids indicates that these coral-like Co@Co3O4/C nanohybrids could achieve a high removal efficiency of 99.98% at pH 6 in 120 min. The adsorption kinetics data of Co@Co3O4/C nanohybrids follow a pseudo-second-order reaction kinetics suggesting a chemisorption effect. The adsorbent has also shown its merit in reusability for four adsorption-desorption cycles without showing significant change in the removal efficiency. More in-depth studies validate that the excellent adsorption capability of Co@Co3O4/C adsorbent attributing to the electrostatic and pi-pi interaction between adsorbent and various antibiotics. Concisely, the adsorbent manifests the potential for the removal of a wide range of antibiotics from the water alongside showing their utility in the hassle-free magnetic separation.

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