Substances that possess hierarchical and interconnected porous features are ideal choices for acting as skeletons to synthesize surface molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs). In this work, rape pollen, a waste of… Click to show full abstract
Substances that possess hierarchical and interconnected porous features are ideal choices for acting as skeletons to synthesize surface molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs). In this work, rape pollen, a waste of biological resources, was calcined and a porous mesh material with a high specific surface area was obtained. The cellular material was adopted as a supporting skeleton to synthesize high-performance MIPs (CRPD-MIPs). The CRPD-MIPs presented an ultrathin imprinted layered structure, with an enhanced adsorption capacity for sinapic acid (154 mg g-1) relative to the non-imprinted polymers. The CRPD-MIPs also exhibited good selectivity (IF = 3.24) and a fast kinetic adsorption equilibrium (60 min). This method exhibited a good linear relationship (R2 = 0.9918) from 0.9440 to 29.26 μg mL-1, and the relative recoveries were 87.1-92.3%. The proposed CRPD-MIPs based on hierarchical and interconnected porous calcined rape pollen may be a valid program for the selective extraction of a particular ingredient from complicated actual samples.
               
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