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      Cotton fiber-supported layered double hydroxides for the highly efficient adsorption of anionic organic pollutants in water

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          Abstract

          Cotton fiber is used as a substrate for the immobilization of LDHs and applied for the adsorption anionic pharmaceuticals and dyes.

          Abstract

          The immobilization of crystals on proper substrates is important and challenging in functional material fields. Cotton fiber is a natural material, which possesses several advantages such as low cost, biodegradability, large specific surface area and hygroscopic properties beneficial for mass transfer. In this work, layered double hydroxide (LDH) crystals are in situ immobilized onto cotton fiber via a facile polydopamine functionalization procedure. Compared with the free-standing LDHs, the LDHs/cotton fiber composite exhibits a superior adsorption performance with a higher adsorption capacity and fast adsorption kinetics for anionic organic pollutants in water. The maximum adsorption capacities of the composite are 625 and 714 mg g −1 for ketoprofen and Congo red, respectively. Moreover, due to the superb shape adjustability of the cotton material, the resulting composite can be applied in multiple devices and used in different conditions. In addition, the spent composite can be easily recycled by simply washing it with NaOH aqueous solution. Therefore, the cotton fiber-supported LDH crystal composite is a promising adsorbent for the removal of anionic organic pollutants from water.

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          Mussel-inspired surface chemistry for multifunctional coatings.

          We report a method to form multifunctional polymer coatings through simple dip-coating of objects in an aqueous solution of dopamine. Inspired by the composition of adhesive proteins in mussels, we used dopamine self-polymerization to form thin, surface-adherent polydopamine films onto a wide range of inorganic and organic materials, including noble metals, oxides, polymers, semiconductors, and ceramics. Secondary reactions can be used to create a variety of ad-layers, including self-assembled monolayers through deposition of long-chain molecular building blocks, metal films by electroless metallization, and bioinert and bioactive surfaces via grafting of macromolecules.
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            Pore- and Solid-Diffusion Kinetics in Fixed-Bed Adsorption under Constant-Pattern Conditions

              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
              • Article: not found

              Non-Covalent Self-Assembly and Covalent Polymerization Co-Contribute to Polydopamine Formation

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                NJCHE5
                New Journal of Chemistry
                New J. Chem.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                1144-0546
                1369-9261
                2018
                2018
                : 42
                : 12
                : 9463-9471
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Key Laboratory of Combinatorial Biosynthesis and Drug Discovery
                [2 ]Ministry of Education, and Wuhan University School of Pharmaceutical Sciences
                [3 ]Wuhan
                [4 ]China
                [5 ]State Key Laboratory of Transducer Technology
                Article
                10.1039/C8NJ00678D
                ac5b1faf-2305-4ff5-8f11-94634df0a822
                © 2018

                http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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