TY - JOUR
T1 - Imparting Selective Fluorophilic Interactions in Redox Copolymers for the Electrochemically Mediated Capture of Short-Chain Perfluoroalkyl Substances
AU - Román Santiago, Anaira
AU - Yin, Song
AU - Elbert, Johannes
AU - Lee, Jiho
AU - Shukla, Diwakar
AU - Su, Xiao
N1 - Funding Information:
Material characterization was carried out, in part, in the Materials Research Laboratory Central Research Facilities, University of Illinois. The authors thank Furong Sun and the staff at the Mass Spectrometry Lab and the School of Chemical Sciences NMR Lab at the University of Illinois for their support in running LC–MS and NMR measurements. The authors are very grateful to Ruth Lam and J.L. for their help in running experiments and preparing electrodes. The authors also thank Soumajit Dutta, Austin Weigle, Prateek Bansal, and Zhengyuan Xue for their kind help and useful insights into MD modeling experiments. This work was supported by educational grants from 3M Company, United States (Minneapolis, MN). This work was also partially supported by C3.ai Digital Transformation Institute, the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, and the National Science Foundation under Grant#1931941. Support was also provided by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship to A.R.S. Any opinion, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of 3M Company or the NSF.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society
PY - 2023/5/3
Y1 - 2023/5/3
N2 - With increasing regulations on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) across the world, understanding the molecular level interactions that drive their binding by functional adsorbent materials is key to effective PFAS removal from water streams. With the phaseout of legacy long-chain PFAS, the emergence of short-chain PFAS has posed a significant challenge for material design due to their higher mobility and hydrophilicity and inefficient removal by conventional treatment methods. Here, we demonstrate how cooperative molecular interactions are essential to target short-chain PFAS (from C4 to C7) by tailoring structural units to enhance affinity while modulating the electrochemical control of capture and release of PFAS. We report a new class of fluorinated redox-active amine-functionalized copolymers to leverage both fluorophilic and electrostatic interactions for short-chain PFAS binding. We combine molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and electrosorption to elucidate the role of the designer functional groups in enabling affinity toward short-chain PFAS. Preferential interaction coefficients from MD simulations correlated closely with experimental trends: fluorination enhanced the overall PFAS uptake and promoted the capture of less hydrophobic short-chain PFAS (C ≤ 5), while electrostatic interactions provided by secondary amine groups were sufficient to capture PFAS with higher hydrophobicity (C ≥ 6). The addition of an induced electric field showed favorable kinetic enhancement for the shortest PFAS and increased the reversibility of release from the electrode. Integration of these copolymers with electrochemical separations showed potential for removing these contaminants at environmentally relevant conditions while eliminating the need for chemical regeneration.
AB - With increasing regulations on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) across the world, understanding the molecular level interactions that drive their binding by functional adsorbent materials is key to effective PFAS removal from water streams. With the phaseout of legacy long-chain PFAS, the emergence of short-chain PFAS has posed a significant challenge for material design due to their higher mobility and hydrophilicity and inefficient removal by conventional treatment methods. Here, we demonstrate how cooperative molecular interactions are essential to target short-chain PFAS (from C4 to C7) by tailoring structural units to enhance affinity while modulating the electrochemical control of capture and release of PFAS. We report a new class of fluorinated redox-active amine-functionalized copolymers to leverage both fluorophilic and electrostatic interactions for short-chain PFAS binding. We combine molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and electrosorption to elucidate the role of the designer functional groups in enabling affinity toward short-chain PFAS. Preferential interaction coefficients from MD simulations correlated closely with experimental trends: fluorination enhanced the overall PFAS uptake and promoted the capture of less hydrophobic short-chain PFAS (C ≤ 5), while electrostatic interactions provided by secondary amine groups were sufficient to capture PFAS with higher hydrophobicity (C ≥ 6). The addition of an induced electric field showed favorable kinetic enhancement for the shortest PFAS and increased the reversibility of release from the electrode. Integration of these copolymers with electrochemical separations showed potential for removing these contaminants at environmentally relevant conditions while eliminating the need for chemical regeneration.
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U2 - 10.1021/jacs.2c10963
DO - 10.1021/jacs.2c10963
M3 - Article
C2 - 36944079
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 145
SP - 9508
EP - 9519
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 17
ER -