Issue 1, 2016

Non-covalent functionalization of high-surface area nanomaterials: a new class of sorbent materials

Abstract

A non-covalent approach to functionalizing nanostructured materials with high-specificity ligands is described. In this work a variety of thiol ligands were non-covalently attached to self-assembled phenyl monolayers on nanostructured materials by taking advantage of favorable aromatic interactions. The resulting sorbent materials, both mesoporous silica and magnetic nanoparticles, were found to be very effective at scavenging soft heavy metal cations, Cd(II), Hg(II), Pb(II) and Ag(I), from aqueous matrices, performing better than commercial sorbents and comparably to the best covalently functionalized thiol sorbents available. This approach can be extended to a variety of surface chemistries and has application to chemical functionalization of a broad range of support structures used for chemical separations and processing.

Graphical abstract: Non-covalent functionalization of high-surface area nanomaterials: a new class of sorbent materials

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Aug 2015
Accepted
27 Oct 2015
First published
27 Oct 2015

Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2016,3, 138-145

Author version available

Non-covalent functionalization of high-surface area nanomaterials: a new class of sorbent materials

K. M. Nell, S. A. Fontenot, T. G. Carter, M. G. Warner, C. L. Warner, R. S. Addleman and D. W. Johnson, Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2016, 3, 138 DOI: 10.1039/C5EN00170F

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