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Starch-based polymer materials as advanced adsorbents for sustainable water treatment: current status, challenges, and future perspectives

Khoo, Pui San and Rushdan, Ahmad Ilyas and Uda, Muhammad Nur Aiman and Abu Hassan, Shukur and Nordin, Abu Hassan and Abdul Samad, Norfarhana and Ab. Hamid, Nur Hafizah and Rani, Mohd. Saiful Asmal and Hairul Abral, Hairul Abral and Norrrahim, Mohd. Nor Faiz and Knight, Victor Feizal and Lee, Chuan Li and Shafi, Ayu Rafiqah (2023) Starch-based polymer materials as advanced adsorbents for sustainable water treatment: current status, challenges, and future perspectives. Polymers, 15 (14). pp. 1-31. ISSN 2073-4360

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15143114

Abstract

Over the past three decades, chemical and biological water contamination has become a major concern, particularly in the industrialized world. Heavy metals, aromatic compounds, and dyes are among the harmful substances that contribute to water pollution, which jeopardies the human health. For this reason, it is of the utmost importance to locate methods for the cleanup of wastewater that are not genuinely effective. Owing to its non-toxicity, biodegradability, and biocompatibility, starch is a naturally occurring polysaccharide that scientists are looking into as a possible environmentally friendly material for sustainable water remediation. Starch could exhibit significant adsorption capabilities towards pollutants with the substitution of amide, amino, carboxyl, and other functional groups for hydroxyl groups. Starch derivatives may effectively remove contaminants such as oil, organic solvents, pesticides, heavy metals, dyes, and pharmaceutical pollutants by employing adsorption techniques at a rate greater than 90%. The maximal adsorption capacities of starch-based adsorbents for oil and organic solvents, pesticides, heavy metal ions, dyes, and pharmaceuticals are 13,000, 66, 2000, 25,000, and 782 mg/g, respectively. Although starch-based adsorbents have demonstrated a promising future for environmental wastewater treatment, additional research is required to optimize the technique before the starch-based adsorbent can be used in large-scale in situ wastewater treatment.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:adsorbent, dye, heavy metals, micropollutants, oil, organic solvents, pesticides, pharmaceutical pollutants, starch, wastewater treatment
Subjects:Q Science > QC Physics
T Technology > TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery
Divisions:Mechanical Engineering
ID Code:106487
Deposited By: Yanti Mohd Shah
Deposited On:08 Jul 2024 08:11
Last Modified:08 Jul 2024 08:11

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