4.2 Article

Modulating Uranium Extraction Performance of Multivariate Covalent Organic Frameworks through Donor-Acceptor Linkers and Amidoxime Nanotraps

Journal

JACS AU
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacsau.2c00614

Keywords

multivariate covalent organic frameworks; chelating affinity; adsorption-photocatalysis; donor-acceptor; uranium extraction

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Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) with photocatalytic linkers were designed for uranium extraction from seawater. A COF-based adsorption-photocatalysis strategy was developed for selective removal of uranyl from seawater without sacrificial reagents. The quaternary COF showed high uranium uptake capacity and good anti-biofouling abilities, opening the pathway for economic and efficient extraction of uranium from the oceans.
Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) can be designed to allow uranium extraction from seawater by incorporating photocatalytic linkers. However, often sacrificial reagents are required for separating photogenerated charges which limits their practical applications. Herein, we present a COF-based adsorption-photocatalysis strategy for selective removal of uranyl from seawater in the absence of sacrificial reagents. A series of ternary and quaternary COFs were synthesized containing the electron-rich linker 2,4,6triformylphloroglucinol as the electron donor, the electron-deficient linker 4,4 '- (thiazolo[5,4-d]thiazole-2,5-diyl)dibenzaldehyde as the acceptor, and amidoxime nano traps for selective uranyl capture (with the quaternary COFs incorporating [2,2 '- bipyridine-5,5 '-diamine-Ru(Bp)2]Cl2 as a secondary photosensitizer). The ordered porous structure of the quaternary COFs ensured efficient mass transfer during the adsorptionphotocatalysis capture of uranium from seawater samples, with photocatalytically generated electrons resulting in the reduction of adsorbed U(VI) to U(IV) in the form of UO2. A quaternary COF, denoted as COF 2-Ru-AO, possessed a high uranium uptake capacity of 2.45 mg/g/day in natural seawater and good anti-biofouling abilities, surpassing most adsorbents thus far. This work shows that multivariate COF adsorptionphotocatalysts can be rationally engineered to work efficiently and stably without sacrificial electron donors, thus opening the pathway for the economic and efficient extraction of uranium from the earth's oceans.

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