Natural and Natural-Based Polymers: Recent Developments in Management of Emerging Pollutants
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Emerging Pollutants—A New Threat to the Environment with Natural Solutions?
3. Methodology
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- Research articles published from 2012 to the present, full text;
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- Articles published or available in English;
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- Removal of emerging pollutants—for the automatic screening, only the term “pollutant” was used;
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- Evaluation of natural polymers’ application in the management of emerging pollutants (as defined in Section 2)—manual screening;
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- Relevance to the review topic (new information provided).
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- Articles published before 2012;
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- Book chapters or book;
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- Review or systematic review articles;
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- Conference papers, notes, letters, short surveys, errata or conference reviews;
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- Articles published in languages other than English;
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- Articles presenting the removal of pollutants monitored in routine studies (such as commonly encountered heavy metals).
4. Results
5. Natural Polymers for the Management of Emerging Pollutants
5.1. Management of Pharmaceuticals Using Natural Polymers
5.2. Management of Plant Protection Product Pollutants Using Natural Polymers
5.3. Management of Industrial Dyes and Dye Models Using Natural Polymers
5.4. Management of Other Types of Industrial Emerging Pollutants Using Natural Polymers
5.5. Management of Other Hazardous Emerging Pollutants Using Natural Polymers
6. Concluding Remarks and Future Perspectives
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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P (Problem) | Presence of emerging pollutants in water streams |
I (Intervention) | Application of innovative, natural polymeric materials for emerging pollutants’ removal |
C (Comparison) | Materials with known properties in environment protection or singular components, in the case of composite materials |
O (Outcome) | Improvement of pollutant uptake and the use of natural polymers |
Natural Polymer | Targeted Application | Application Form | Obtained Results | Process Parameters | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Guar gum | Ciprofloxacin (fluoroquinolone antibiotic) adsorption, 15 mg/L | Zerovalent iron-guar gum nanocomposite, spherical, particle size of ∼60–70 nm (0.5 g/L) | 94% removal after 60 min | Superior adsorption at pH 4, compared with pH 2.6 (41%), superior to zerovalent ion by itself (69%); removal efficiency over 85% after 2 recycling cycles | [41] |
Lignin | Adsorption of doxycycline hydrochloride (tetracycline antibiotic), 30 mg/L | Lignin xanthate resin–bentonite clay composite, porous structure | Adsorption capacity 438.75 mg/g | Superior to bentonite (119.93 mg/g); isotherm—Langmuir model (monolayer and uniform adsorption); kinetics—pseudo-second-order model (multilayer adsorption on heterogeneous surfaces, adsorption through electrostatic interaction, hydrogen bonding and π–π interactions—chemisorption) | [42] |
Cellulose | p-arsanilic acid (veterinary use) | Ionic liquid-modified cellulose | Adsorption capacity 216.9 mg/g | Comparable results with other works, fast adsorption rate 3.21 × 10−3 g/(mg × min), process conformed to Freundlich (multi-layer adsorption on heterogenous surfaces) and pseudo-second-order kinetics model; 77% of initial capacity after six recycling cycles | [43] |
Sodium alginate | Cephalexin (beta-lactam antibiotic), 30 mg/L | Saccharomyces cerevisiae/calcium alginate composite beads, 3.32 mm diameter | Adsorption capacity 94.34 mg/g | Superior to literature biosorbents; isotherm—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model | [44] |
Inulin | Adsorption and heterogenous catalysis of ofloxacin (fluoroquinolone-type antibiotic), 25 mM | Immobilization of laccase onto dialdehyde inulin -coated silica-capped magnetite nanoparticles, 90% of the particles with diameters 1–10 nm | 63% removal capacity | Superior results to laccase alone. Ofloxacin removal—through adsorption and biodegradation mechanisms; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model; 50% of initial activity after 6 reuse cycles | [45] |
Chitosan, sodium alginate | Adsorption and catalytic oxidation of naproxen, diclofenac (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs—NSAID), 25 mg/L, individually or simultaneously | Magnetite or Fe/Cu nanoparticles, on alginate or chitosan beads | 84/92% removal of naproxen/diclofenac, using Fe/Cu on alginate or chitosan, respectively, after 9 min | Good removal capacity in short reaction time (9 min); kinetics—pseudo-first-order model (reaction more inclined towards physisorption); slight decrease in removal efficiencies after three recycling cycles | [46] |
Sodium alginate | Biosorption of ethacridine lactate (aromatic organic compound, antiseptic, trade name Rivanol), 50 mg/L | Encapsulation of Saccharomyces pastorianus residual biomass in calcium alginate, irregular and elongated shape, 1.89 mm diameter | Maximum capacity 21.39 mg/g, batch study | Kinetics—pseudo-second-order and intraparticle diffusion (adsorption controlled by one of the following: film diffusion/adsorbate diffusion into the pores/ surface adsorption); equilibrium isotherms—Freundlich and Dubinin–Radushkevich (adsorption is related to pores volume filling). | [47] |
Sodium alginate | Biosorption of ethacridine lactate (aromatic organic compound, antiseptic, trade name Rivanol), 20/40 mg/L | Encapsulation of Saccharomyces pastorianus residual biomass in calcium alginate; spherical, whitish beads, 3.218 mm diameter | Biosorption capacity 138.584 mg/g, fixed-bed column study | Biosorption capacity variable with bed height, pollutant concentration and flow rate. Experimental data best fit the Yoon–Nelson (premise—decreasing adsorption rate directly proportional to adsorbate adsorption), Clark (premise—adsorption is mass-transfer concept combined with Freundlich isotherm, piston type behavior of flow in column), and, to a lesser extent, Yan model (dose–response model) | [48] |
Natural Polymer | Pollutant | Pollutant Class | Application Form | Obtained Results | Process Parameters | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cellulose | Humic acid, 1 g/L | Biostimulant | Cellulose nanofibers obtained by addition of epoxypropyl trimethyl ammonium chloride at 65 °C, 8 h | Adsorption rate 184 × 10−3 min−1 | Composite (1 mL, 0.2–0.4 wt%) added to different amounts of humic acid solution, shaken for 2 days; best results at pH 4.5; at pH = 6.2, adsorption rate = 49 × 10−3 min−1; isotherms—Langmuir model | [53] |
Chitosan | Humic acid | Biostimulant | Polyacrylamide/chitosan semi-interpenetrating network hydrogels | Maximum adsorption 166.30 mg/g | 0.025 g of composite dispersed in 50 mL of 60 mg/mL pollutant; pH = 3 to 11; results superior to other organic and inorganic adsorbents in literature; isotherm—Sips model (multilayer adsorption on heterogeneous surfaces at low concentrations and monolayer adsorption at higher pollutant concentrations) | [54] |
Chitosan | Phosphate | Fungicide | Iron oxide nanoparticle-loaded chitosan composites | Removal capacity of 0.059 mgP/g | Pilot plant: adsorption tower (height = 100 cm, inner diameter = 45 cm, flow rate = 7.05 ± 0.18 L/min), composite volume = 80 L, composite weight = 85.74 kg; constant adsorption capacity after six recycling cycles | [55] |
Sodium alginate | Phosphate | Fungicide | Iron crosslinked alginate beads | Maximum adsorption capacity 79 mg/g | Experiments conducted with synthetic water; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model, isotherm—Freundlich model; experiments with real eutrophic lake water—81–100% removal in 24 h (11–69 μg/L initial concentration). | [56] |
β-Cyclodextrin | Humic acid, 10 mg/L | Biostimulant | β-cyclodextrin polymer synthesized in the aqueous phase using tetrafluoroterephthalonitrile as a rigid crosslinker, epichlorohydrin as a flexible crosslinker and 2,3- epoxypropyltrimethylammonium chloride as a quaternization reagent | Maximum adsorption 40 mg/g | Solid/liquid ratio = 1 mg/mL; adsorption superior to commercial materials; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model and Elovich model (solute adsorption rate decreases with the increase of adsorbed solute); isotherm—Freundlich model; no significant adsorption decrease after five recycling cycles | [57] |
β-Cyclodextrin | Fluvic acid, 30 mg/L | Biostimulant | Maximum adsorption 166 mg/g | |||
β-Cyclodextrin | 2,4,6-trichlorophenol, 0.1 mmol/L | Fungicide, herbicide, insecticide | Maximum adsorption 108 mg/g | |||
Chitosan, gelatin | Atrazine (20 mg/L), fenitrothion (20 mg/L) | Pesticides | Polymeric composite prepared by inotropic gelation at room temperature | Adsorption capacity 75.19 mg/g (atrazine), 36.23 mg/g (fenitrothion) | Composite (0.3 g/L) added to 50 mL pollutant solution; adsorption time 180 min. Isotherm—Langmuir model | [58] |
Cellulose | Chlorpyrifos, 100 μg/L | Insecticide | Polymeric films developed by incorporating dibutyl sebacate, bis(2-ethylhexyl) sebacate, bis(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate, bis(1-butylpentyl) adipate, 2-nitrophenyl octyl ether or 2-fluorophenyl 2-nitrophenyl ether in cellulose triacetate, by solvent casting | Extraction efficiency from synthetic water 71–87% (after 8 h) | Best results obtained for composite with bis(2-ethylhexyl) sebacate; water samples maintained in contact with the film having area of 2.89 cm2, under orbital agitation | [59] |
β-cyclodextrin | Humic acid | Biostimulant | Friedel–Crafts alkylation reaction between modified β-cyclodextrin and 4,4′ -bis(chloromethyl)-1,1′—biphenyl in a homogeneous ionic liquid system | Maximum adsorption 142 mg/g | 0.015 g of composite dispersed in 15 mL of 20 mg/L pollutant; results superior to activated carbon; isotherm—Freundlich model; over 90% efficiency after six recycling cycles | [60] |
Natural Polymer | Targeted Application | Application Form | Obtained Results | Process Parameters | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cellulose | Adsorption of crystal violet (dye with practical applications), 11.1 mg/L | Freeze-dried foams consisting of cellulose nanofibers (obtained by addition of epoxypropyl trimethyl ammonium chloride at 65 °C, 8 h) with adsorbed humic acid | 55% adsorption | Porous foam with density of 25 kg/m3, porosity 98% (20 mg) added to 45 mL of dye solution | [53] |
Chitosan | Reduction of methylene blue (model dye), 10 ppm | Silver nitrate mixed with chitosan/polyethylene glycol solution, various concentrations of TiO2 added at 80 °C | 63.48% degradation | Direct sunlight photocatalysis; Langmuir–Hinshelwood mechanism | [65] |
Xylan | Adsorption of methylene blue (model dye), 400 mg/L | Xylan/poly(acrylic acid) magnetite nanoparticles nanocomposite hydrogel | Maximum adsorption capacity—438.60 mg/g | Removal rate >90% for 3 g/L adsorbent; isotherm—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model | [66] |
Cellulose and chitosan | Adsorption of Congo red (histological staining agent), 30 mg/L | Cellulose/chitosan hydrogel prepared by extruding and regenerating from ionic liquid 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate in ethanol | Maximum adsorption capacity—40 mg/g | For adsorbent dosage of 2.0 g/L, equilibrium was reached within 115 min, removal rate was 89.6%; isotherms—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model | [67] |
Silk | Filtration of dyes with industrial and biotechnology applications | Membranes prepared by vacuum filtration of exfoliated degummed Bombyx mori silk fibers | >90% rejection | Vacuum filtration device, best results obtained for Alcian Blue 8GX (100%, initial concentration 185 µM), Brilliant Blue G (100%, initial concentration 398 µM), Rhodamine B (91%, initial concentration 5 mM) | [68] |
Chitosan | Photodegradation of Ponceau BS (staining agent) | Polyaniline-grafted chitosan prepared by chemical using ammonium per sulfate; Ag nanoparticles incorporated into the polymer matrix | Complete degradation after 40 min | Photodegradation under visible light; kinetic—pseudo-first-order model | [69] |
Chitosan, lignin | Removal of acid black-172 (dye with industrial applications), 100 mg/L | Ternary graft copolymer (chitosan–acrylamide–lignin), synthesized using microwave irradiation and chemical-free radical initiator technique | Removal efficiency—97.1% | Dosage 200 mg/L; possible mechanisms—charge neutralization, bridging and sweeping effects | [70] |
Guar gum | Catalytic oxidation of methyl orange (100 ppm) | Zerovalent iron–guar gum nanocomposite, spherical, particle size of ∼60–70 nm (0.5 g/L) | 99% after 60 min, pH 7 | Superior oxidation to zerovalent ion by itself (39%) | [41] |
β-cyclodextrin | Adsorption of methylene blue (model dye), 100 mg/L | Citric acid-crosslinked β-cyclodextrin | Maximum adsorption capacity—0.9229 mmol/g | 0.4 g in 200 mL pollutant, pH = 1–10; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model; isotherm—Sips model; no decrease in performance after five recycling cycles | [71] |
Lignin | Adsorption of methylene blue (model dye), 1 mg/mL | Hydrogels obtained by crosslinking poly(methyl vinyl ether co-maleic acid) and lignin in ammonium and sodium hydroxide solutions | Adsorption capacity—629 mg/g | Dry hydrogels (20–30 mg) placed in 20 mL pollutant solution, stirred for 48 h at room temperature; maximum removal efficiency—96%, superior results to control hydrogels (without lignin) | [72] |
Pectin | Adsorption of methylene blue (model dye), 100–1000 mg/L | Pectin microgel particles | Adsorption capacity—284.09 mg/g | Different uptake times (2–310 min), pH 1–7; isotherm—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model; recovery efficiency higher than 80% after three cycles | [73] |
Chitosan | Adsorption of CI Basic Red 14 (dye with industrial applications), 100 ppm | Polymeric beads containing chitosan, Arundo donax L. cells, gelatin and poly(vinyl)pyrrolidone | Maximum adsorption capacity—41.322 mg/g | Removal efficiency of 92.2% (at 2 g. adsorbent); isotherms—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-first-order model | [74] |
(Konjac) glucomannan | Adsorption of malachite green (common dye with industrial applications) | Konjac glucomannan/graphene oxide sponges prepared by ice template method | Maximum adsorption capacity—189.96 mg/g | Isotherms—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-first-order model; adsorption capacity relatively high after five recycling cycles | [75] |
Sodium alginate | Adsorption and photocatalytic degradation of crystal violet (dye with practical applications) | Grafted sodium alginate/ZnO/graphene oxide composite | Maximum adsorption capacity—13.85 mg/g | Maximum capacity at pH = 5; isotherm—Freundlich model; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model; photocatalytic degradation enhanced the removal efficiency by 10% | [76] |
Tragacanth gum | Adsorption of methylene blue (model dye) | Hydrogel nanocomposite composed of tragacanth gum and modified CaCO3 nanoparticles | Maximum adsorption capacity—476 mg/g | Isotherm—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-first-order model; film diffusion—main mechanism of adsorption | [77] |
Chitosan | Adsorption of Acid Blue-113 (industrial dye) | Chitosan-coated polyacrylonitrile nanofibrous mat | Maximum adsorption capacity—1708 mg/g | Superior results compared with control (without chitosan); superior capacity than commercial activated carbon; isotherm—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model; film diffusion—main mechanism of adsorption; slight decrease in adsorption after four cycles | [78] |
Silk | Adsorption of crystal violet (dye with practical applications) | 3D porous network in a freeze-dried silk fibroin/ soursop seed polymer composite | Maximum adsorption capacity—83.31 mg/g | Isotherms—Freundlich model; kinetics—pseudo-first-order model. | [79] |
Sodium alginate, | Adsorption of crystal violet (cationic dye with practical applications), 200 mg/L | Hydrogel beads from rice bran combined with sodium alginate | Maximum adsorption capacity—454.55 mg/g | Isotherms—Freundlich model; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model; no adsorption decrease after five regeneration cycles | [80] |
Chitosan | Adsorption of reactive blue 4 (anionic dye with practical applications), 200 mg/L | Hydrogel beads from rice bran combined with chitosan | Maximum adsorption capacity—212.77 mg/g | Isotherms—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-first-order model; satisfactory adsorption (20% decrease) after five recycling cycles | |
Sodium alginate | Degradation of methylene blue (model dye) | Ca-alginate/CuO beads | 92% degradation in 8 min | 100 mg composite added to 5 mL methylene blue solution in the presence of 1 mL NaBH4 (0.08 mol/L); kinetics—pseudo-first-order model; degradation reduced when using recycled composites; slow decrease in degradation after ten recycling cycles | [81] |
Chitosan | Adsorption of Arsenazo-III (staining, analytical reagent), 100 mg/L | Chitosan hydrogel polymer, initiator potassium persulphate | Maximum adsorption capacity—99.9 mg/g | pH = 6, shaking time of 120 min, polymer dose of 0.01 g, room temperature | [82] |
Chitosan | Alizarin Red S (staining, analytical reagent), 100 mg/L | Maximum adsorption capacity—62.5 mg/g | |||
Sodium alginate | Separation of Congo red (histological staining agent), 0.1 mg/L | Nacre-inspired multiple crosslinked polyvinyl alcohol/ calcium alginate/SiO2 membrane | Rejection efficiency—99.5% | Long-term separation properties demonstrated by the membrane; over 99% of initial efficiency retained after three recycling cycles | [83] |
Separation of Alizarin red (staining, analytical reagent), 0.1 mg/L | Rejection efficiency—99.1% | ||||
Separation of Sunset yellow (dye for food and beverage industry), 0.1 mg/L | Rejection efficiency—98.3% |
Natural Polymer | Targeted Application | Pollutant Class | Application Form | Obtained Results | Process Parameters | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chitosan | Adsorption of chlorophenol (50 mg/kg) and phthalic anhydride (70 mg/kg) | industrial precursor/plasticizer | Poly(N,N-diethylacrylamide), poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) and poly(N-vinylcaprolactum) grafted on chitosan/derivatives | 100% removal of organic impurities | Best results obtained for poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) graft carboxymethylchitosan at 6 mg/mL; materials can be used for at least 5 cycles | [86] |
Cellulose | Flocculation of nonylphenol, 100 μg/L | Precursor for antioxidants, lubricating oil additives, laundry, dish detergents, emulsifiers, solubilizers, surfactants | (poly N-isopropyl acrylamide)-co-(poly diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride) grafted on carboxymethylcellulose | Flocculation, nonylphenol removal = 79% | Optimized conditions: pH = 4; T = 35 °C; dosage = 40 mg/L | [87] |
β-cyclodextrin | Adsorption of perfluorooctanoic acid | surfactant, industrial importance | β-cyclodextrin decafluorobiphenyl polymer (DFB-CDP, 1:β-CD feed ratio = 3) | Adsorption capacity = 34 mg/g, superior to sieved coconut shell-activated carbon | Freundlich model best fit the adsorption isotherm; no significant differences after four recycling cycles | [88] |
β-cyclodextrin | Adsorption of bisphenol A, 100 mg/L | Plastics industry | Citric acid-crosslinked β-cyclodextrin | Maximum adsorption capacity = 0.3636 mmol/g | 0.4 g in 200 mL pollutant, pH = 1–10; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model; isotherm—Langmuir model; 80% adsorption capacity after five recycling cycles | [71] |
β-Cyclodextrin | Adsorption of 2-naphthol, 0.1 mmol/L | Intermediate in dyes production | β-cyclodextrin polymer synthesized in the aqueous phase using tetrafluoroterephthalonitrile as a rigid crosslinker, epichlorohydrin as a flexible crosslinker and 2,3- epoxypropyltrimethylammonium chloride as a quaternization reagent | Maximum adsorption = 74 mg/g | Solid/liquid ratio = 1 mg/mL; adsorption superior to commercial materials; kinetics—pseudo-second-order and Elovich (solute adsorption rate decreases with the increase of adsorbed solute) models; isotherm—Freundlich model | [57] |
β-Cyclodextrin | Adsorption of 3-phenylphenol, 0.1 mmol/L | Colorimetric reagent | Maximum adsorption = 101 mg/g | |||
β-Cyclodextrin | Adsorption of bisphenol A, 0.1 mmol/L | Plastics industry | Maximum adsorption = 103 mg/g | |||
β-Cyclodextrin | Adsorption of bisphenol S, 0.1 mmol/L | Industrial application in epoxy resins | Maximum adsorption = 117 mg/g | |||
Chitosan | Catalytic reduction of p-nitrophenol, 5 mM | Industrial intermediate | Chitosan/reduced graphene oxide-based composite hydrogel, with glutaraldehyde crosslinking agent, loaded with Pd nanoparticles | Catalytic reduction, rate constant = 0.0348 min−1 | Hydrogel mixed with 1 mL pollutant solution, added 10 mL NaBH4 solution (0.01 M); results superior to literature data, better for 2-nitroaniline | [89] |
Chitosan | Catalytic reduction 2-nitroaniline, 5 mM | Industrial intermediate | Catalytic reduction, rate constant = 0.125 min−1 | |||
Chitosan | Degradation of phenol, 100 mg/L | Industrial intermediate | Recombination of chitosan and polyvinyl alcohol, with microorganisms added | Biodegradation, 99%, degradation rate increasing after several uses | Best results obtained at 30 °C, pH = 7, higher compared with microorganism alone; over 95% degradation rates after 90 recycling cycles | [90] |
Chitosan | Degradation of p-cresol, 100 mg/L | Industrial intermediate | Degradation in the presence of 1600 mg/L phenol, concentration decreased to 0.4 mg/L | |||
Chitosan | Degradation of catechol, 100 mg/L | Industrial intermediate | Degradation in the presence of 1600 mg/L phenol, concentration decreased to 0.6 mg/L | |||
Chitosan | Degradation of 2-aminophenol, 100 mg/L | Industrial intermediate | Degradation in the presence of 1600 mg/L phenol, concentration decreased to 4.7 mg/L | |||
Chitosan | Degradation of p-nitrophenol, 10 mg/L | Industrial intermediate | Bi-functional ternary nanocomposite constructed using chitosan-wrapped carbon nanofibers, embedded with Ag-doped Co3O4 | Degradation constant = 0.0186 min−1; degradation efficiency = 97.39% for 40 mg catalyst | 10–40 mg catalyst immersed in 100 mL pollutant solution; solution irradiated with visible light; degradation rate higher than carbon nanofibers and metal oxide alone; over 90% degradation after five recycling cycles | [91] |
β-cyclodextrin | Adsorption of bisphenol A, 20 mg/L | Plastics industry | Friedel–Crafts alkylation reaction between modified β-cyclodextrin and 4,4′-bis(chloromethyl)-1,1′-biphenyl in a homogeneous ionic liquid system | Maximum adsorption = 257.75 mg/g | 0.015 g of composite dispersed in 15 mL pollutant; results superior to activated carbon; isotherm—Freundlich model; over 90% efficiency after six recycling cycles | [60] |
Sodium alginate | Degradation of p-nitrophenol, 10−4 M | Industrial intermediate | Ca-alginate/CuO beads | Degradation constant = 0.202 min−1; degradation efficiency = 97–98% | 100 mg of composite, in the presence of 0.08 mol/L NaBH4. Degradation efficiency higher than Ca-alginate alone; kinetics—pseudo-first-order model; 75% reduction after 60 min, after 10 recycling cycles | [81] |
Chitosan | Degradation of p-nitrophenol, 20 mg/L | Industrial intermediate | Chitosan/Ag nanoparticles/layered double-hydroxide nanocatalyst | Apparent rate constant = 1.65 × 10−2 s−1 | 20 mg nanocatalyst added to 4 mL NaBH4 (0.54 g/L) and 6 mL of pollutant solution; kinetics—pseudo-first-order model; performance unchanged by 5 recycling cycles | [92] |
Cellulose | Extraction of triclosan, tonalide, 100 μg/L | Personal care products | Polymeric films developed by incorporating dibutyl sebacate, bis(2-ethylhexyl) sebacate, bis(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate, bis(1-butylpentyl) adipate, 2-nitrophenyl octyl ether or 2-fluorophenyl 2-nitrophenyl ether in cellulose triacetate, by solvent casting | Extraction efficiency from synthetic water = 68–93%/44–94% (after 8 h) | Best results for composite with 2-nitrophenyl octyl ether/dibutyl sebacate; water samples maintained in contact with the film having area of 2.89 cm2, under orbital agitation | [59] |
Natural Polymer | Targeted Application | Pollutant Class | Application Form | Obtained Results | Process Parameters | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Silk | Filtration of gold nanoparticles, 5 nm, 5.5 × 1013 unit per mL | Nanoparticles | Membranes prepared by vacuum filtration of exfoliated degummed Bombyx mori silk fibers | Rejection 99% | Vacuum filtration device | [68] |
CdSeS/ZnS quantum dots, 6 nm, 1 mg/mL | Rejection 100% | |||||
Cellulose | Removal of pyrene (25, 100 ppb) from water | Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon | Cellulose fibers grafted with poly(lauryl acrylate) and poly(octadecyl acrylate | Adsorption capacity 38 mg/g | Higher capacity for octadecyl acrylate grafted cellulose | [99] |
(Konjac) glucomannan | Adsorption of U (VI) | Radionuclides | Konjac glucomannan/graphene oxide sponges prepared by ice template method | Maximum adsorption capacity—266.97 mg/g | Selectivity in multi-ions system; isotherms—Langmuir model; kinetics—pseudo-first-order model; adsorption capacity relatively high after five recycling cycles | [75] |
Cellulose | Removal of fluorene, 20 µg/L | Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon | Polystyrene–cotton composites, obtained by dipping pretreated cotton in 2% polystyrene solution in chloroform | Extraction recovery after two elution = 65% | Recovery increased at the second elution | [100] |
Removal of anthracene, 20 µg/L | Extraction recovery after two elution = 71% | |||||
Removal of fluoranthene, 20 µg/L | Extraction recovery after two elution = 85% | |||||
Removal of pyrene, 20 µg/L | Extraction recovery after two elution = 93% | |||||
Cellulose | Removal of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from mainstream cigarette smoke | Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon | Cellulose cigarette filter with porous structure, pore size controlled by polyvinylpyrrolidone using a dip–dry method | Removal efficiency 61.79% | Higher than conventional cellulose acetate filter (39.22% removal) | [101] |
Cellulose | Plastic micro/nanoparticles stained with neutral red dye | Microplastic particles from commercial body scrub | Cellulose surface functionalized with polyethylenimine | Maximum adsorption efficiency of 97%, 98% and 99% for polymethyl methacrylate, polyvinyl chloride and polyvinyl acetate nanoparticles | Kinetics—pseudo-second-order model | [102] |
Cellulose, β-cyclodextrin | Adsorption of microcystin-LR, 1.5, 0.8 µg/mL | Cyanotoxin | Aerogels from cellulose nanofibril grafted with β-cyclodextrin | Adsorption capacity 0.078 mg/g | Aerogels placed in 20 mL of toxin solutions at room temperature and constant stirring; kinetics—pseudo-second-order model | [103] |
Sodium alginate | Adsorption of U (VI), 5 mmol/L | Radionuclides | Granulated resin obtained by crosslinking sodium alginate with 1,6-hexamethylene diisocyanate in benzene | Maximum adsorption capacity—269.80 mg/g | Replacement of Na+ ions by H+ (using dilute mineral acids); replacement of hydrogen ions with metal ions by ion exchange. Higher capacity for U ions compared to other metals | [104] |
Polysaccharides | Coagulation and removal of TiO2 nanoparticles in the form of TiO2–humic acid complex | Nanoparticles | Enteromorpha prolifera polysaccharide together with poly aluminum chloride | Removal efficiency 87.12% | Highest efficiency for 1 mg/L polysaccharides; in the presence of poly aluminum chloride 95.68%; isotherm—Langmuir model; faster growing, larger and stronger flocs | [105] |
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Fierascu, R.C.; Fierascu, I.; Matei, R.I.; Manaila-Maximean, D. Natural and Natural-Based Polymers: Recent Developments in Management of Emerging Pollutants. Polymers 2023, 15, 2063. https://doi.org/10.3390/polym15092063
Fierascu RC, Fierascu I, Matei RI, Manaila-Maximean D. Natural and Natural-Based Polymers: Recent Developments in Management of Emerging Pollutants. Polymers. 2023; 15(9):2063. https://doi.org/10.3390/polym15092063
Chicago/Turabian StyleFierascu, Radu Claudiu, Irina Fierascu, Roxana Ioana Matei (Brazdis), and Doina Manaila-Maximean. 2023. "Natural and Natural-Based Polymers: Recent Developments in Management of Emerging Pollutants" Polymers 15, no. 9: 2063. https://doi.org/10.3390/polym15092063
APA StyleFierascu, R. C., Fierascu, I., Matei, R. I., & Manaila-Maximean, D. (2023). Natural and Natural-Based Polymers: Recent Developments in Management of Emerging Pollutants. Polymers, 15(9), 2063. https://doi.org/10.3390/polym15092063