Lysine-cyclodipeptide-based polyamidoamine microparticles: Balance between the efficiency of copper ion removal and degradation in water

[Display omitted] •Polyamidoamine microparticles containing lysine-cyclodipeptide (L-DKP) are prepared.•Cu2+ absorption capacity and hydrolysis rate decrease with an increase of L-DKP units.•Microparticles without L-DKP have the highest Cu2+ absorption, but degradation leads to re-pollution.•Micropa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical engineering journal (Lausanne, Switzerland : 1996) Switzerland : 1996), 2020-07, Vol.391, p.123493, Article 123493
Hauptverfasser: Ju, Sungbin, Eom, Youngho, Kim, Sang Youl, Hwang, Sung Yeon, Hwang, Dong Soo, Oh, Dongyeop X., Park, Jeyoung
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Polyamidoamine microparticles containing lysine-cyclodipeptide (L-DKP) are prepared.•Cu2+ absorption capacity and hydrolysis rate decrease with an increase of L-DKP units.•Microparticles without L-DKP have the highest Cu2+ absorption, but degradation leads to re-pollution.•Microparticles containing 20 mol% of L-DKP (D2) exhibit the best balance of efficiency/stability.•D2, without disturbing the hydrogen bond, leads to a higher Cu2+ absorption, yet stable in water. A key requirement for materials that adsorb pollutants in aqueous media is the balance between efficiency and biodegradation owing to rising microplastic pollution. Hyperbranched polyamidoamine-based microhydrogel particles from ethylene diamine (EDA) monomer demonstrate high absorbance activity for removing heavy metal ions, yet are vulnerable to hydrolysis. Here, we copolymerize lysine diketopiperazine (L-DKP) and EDA with N,N′-methylenebisacrylamide via a Michael addition reaction-mediated inverse suspension polymerization to obtain highly efficient Cu2+-absorbing materials with controlled degradation in aqueous media. When the L-DKP content is increased, which replaces EDA, degradation is typically prevented at the cost of absorption capacity. At optimal L-DKP content (20 mol% per fed diamine monomers), the microparticle exhibits a performance of 159 Cu2+-mg/g, which is comparable to that of the EDA-only microparticles, but with higher degradation resistance, as only 38 wt% was lost at 37 °C after two weeks. During the hydrolysis of microparticles without L-DKP, the absorbed Cu2+ ions were released, polluting the aquatic environment. In the presence of L-DKP, Cu2+ ions were significantly retained within the working time. In contrast to synthetic microbeads such as polystyrene, accidently leaked L-DKP-based microparticles decompose within six months. These results provide an industrial, environment-friendly, and long-lasting absorbent for water purification.
ISSN:1385-8947
1873-3212
DOI:10.1016/j.cej.2019.123493