A simple, readily-prepared precipitant (1⋅Cl2) precipitates oxalate or terephthalate from water with very high efficacy, removing these anions at sub-millimolar concentrations using only one equivalent of precipitant. A simple aqueous base/acid cycle can be used to regenerate 1⋅Cl2 after use. The resulting precipitates, 1⋅oxalate and 1⋅terephthalate, are anhydrous and closely-packed, with each anion receiving eight charge-assisted hydrogen bonds from amidinium N-H donors. Precipitation of oxalate and terephthalate occurs at much lower concentrations than other dicarboxylates, and direct competition experiments with the biologically/environmentally relevant divalent anions CO3 2-, HPO4 2- and SO4 2- reveal very high selectivity for oxalate or terephthalate over these competitors.
Keywords: anions; oxalate; precipitation; terephthalate; water.
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