Abstract
Ibuprofen contamination from water sources has been increasingly alarming due to its environmentally accumulative retention; however, the strategies for ibuprofen-containing water treatment are still an enormous challenge. Herein, we described the utilization of metal-organic frameworks MIL-53(Fe) (MIL = Materials of Institute Lavoisier) for the adsorption of ibuprofen in synthetic solution. Firstly, the MIL-53(Fe) was solvothemally synthesized and then characterized using the X-ray diffraction and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy techniques. The optimization of ibuprofen adsorption over MIL-53(Fe) was performed with three independent variables including ibuprofen concentration (1.6-18.4 mg/L), adsorbent dosage (0.16-1.84 g/L), and pH (2.6-9.4) according to the experimental design from response surface methodology. Under the optimized conditions, more than 80% of ibuprofen could be eliminated from water, indicating the promising potential of the MIL-53(Fe) material for treatment of this drug. Kinetic and isotherm models also were used to elucidate the chemisorption and monolayer behavior mechanisms of ibuprofen over MIL-53(Fe).
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CITATION STYLE
Nguyen, D. T. C., Le, H. T. N., Do, T. S., Pham, V. T., Tran, D. L., Ho, V. T. T., … Doan, V. T. (2019). Metal-Organic Framework MIL-53(Fe) as an adsorbent for ibuprofen drug removal from aqueous solutions: Response surface modeling and optimization. Journal of Chemistry, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/5602957
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