0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Efficient removal of polystyrene nanoplastics from complex water system through multiple driving forces with MOF-based composite

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 43 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Shiqian Zhou, Xiao Wang, Xuyu Chen, Shijie Yang, Kai Chen, Guanqing Song, Guanhong Lu, Yan Wang, Jing Sun

Summary

Researchers integrated the metal-organic framework UIO-66 into melamine foam to create a composite adsorbent (UMF) that removes polystyrene nanoplastics from water with 65.5 mg/g capacity, maintaining over 81% efficiency after 25 reuse cycles and across a broad pH range, through multiple simultaneous binding mechanisms.

As emerging contaminants widely present in aquatic environments, micro/nano plastics (MPs/NPs) pose global environmental and biosafety concerns. The efficient removal of MPs/NPs faces challenges such as poor selectivity and low cyclic stability of traditional adsorbents. This study developed an in-situ synthesis strategy to integrate UIO-66 with melamine foam (MF), successfully constructing UIO-66/MF (UMF) composite that combined high adsorption capacity with excellent structural stability. The results showed that UMF achieved adsorption equilibrium for PS NPs within 300 min, with an adsorption capacity of 65.5 mg/g. Moreover, UMF maintained over 93 % and 82 % adsorption efficiency in a broad pH range (3-10) and under complex aqueous conditions, respectively. Mechanistic analysis revealed that multiple synergistic interactions were involved in the adsorption process, including hydrophobic interactions, electrostatic interactions, π-π stacking, hydrogen bonding and cation-π interactions. Furthermore, we systematically disclosed the factors which led to the decreased adsorption efficiency in tap water and river water. Notably, UMF exhibited exceptional reusability, retaining higher than 81 % removal efficiency after 25 cycles. UMF effectively addresses the challenges of MOFs powders instability and recycling difficulties, achieving a balance between economy, sustainability, and practicality. This composite provides a promising solution for remediating MPs/NPs pollution in aqueous environments.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Exploration of interaction mechanism and removal performance of polystyrene nanoplastics with covalent organic framework: Experimental and theoretical study

Researchers synthesized a covalent organic framework (COF) material and demonstrated it can remove polystyrene nanoplastics from water with 99% efficiency within two hours, driven primarily by electrostatic attraction, and retains strong performance across multiple regeneration cycles.

Article Tier 2

Removal of Polystyrene Microplastics from Aqueous Solution Using the Metal–Organic Framework Material of ZIF-67

Researchers demonstrated that the metal-organic framework ZIF-67 can effectively adsorb polystyrene microplastics from aqueous solutions, achieving high removal efficiency and suggesting MOF materials as a promising approach for microplastic removal from wastewater.

Article Tier 2

Advances in metal-organic frameworks for microplastic removal from aquatic environments: Mechanisms and performance insights

Researchers reviewed over 65 studies on using metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) — highly porous, sponge-like materials — to remove microplastics from water, finding some MOFs achieved up to 98% removal efficiency and could be reused six times, making them a promising filtration technology for microplastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Removal of polystyrene nanoplastics from aqueous solutions by a novel magnetic zeolite adsorbent

Researchers synthesized a magnetic zeolite adsorbent using co-precipitation and tested it for removal of polystyrene nanoplastics from water, achieving a maximum adsorption capacity of 34.2 milligrams per gram. Iron oxide functional groups on the zeolite surface drove nanoplastic capture via electrostatic attraction, complexation, and pi-pi conjugation, and the material could be magnetically separated for reuse.

Article Tier 2

Removal of polystyrene nanoplastics from water by Cu Ni carbon material: The role of adsorption

Researchers developed a copper-nickel carbon material that removed up to 99.18% of polystyrene nanoplastics from water through physical adsorption, with the recyclable material maintaining approximately 75% removal efficiency after four reuse cycles.

Share this paper