Advanced Functional Materials for Wastewater Treatment and Purification
A special issue of Separations (ISSN 2297-8739). This special issue belongs to the section "Materials in Separation Science".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 20 December 2024 | Viewed by 9097
Special Issue Editors
Interests: biomass-derived carbonaceous materials; solid waste thermal treatments; thermal responsive materials
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The world’s water supplies have been contaminated due to large effluents containing toxic pollutants such as dyes, heavy metals, surfactants, personal care products, pesticides, and pharmaceuticals from agricultural, industrial, and municipal resources into water streams. As such, water contamination and its treatment have emerged as an escalating challenge globally. Amongst various wastewater treatment approaches, adsorption is considered as one of the most cost-effective methods, and it also has witnessed continuous development in the case of the advancements in novel materials as adsorbents. Preferably, an adsorbent should be provided with enough binding sites that can perform appropriate adsorption for pollutants, and the most commonly used conventional adsorbents for pollutants and dye elimination are silica, alumina, activated carbon, clay, metal oxides, titania, etc. However, the performances including adsorption capacity and adsorption selectivity of those materials should be improved for efficient removal of pollutants in wastewater. The breakthrough of materials science and engineering provides innovative solutions to adsorption and separation technology, and this can be addressed through material synthesis (i.e., metal-organic frameworks, low dimensional materials, hydrogels/aerogels, composite materials, etc.) and rational structure design (i.e., surface modification, elemental doping, structural functionalization, etc.).
Hence, this special issue is aiming to cover the latest research progress in the synthesis, characterizations and applications of advanced materials for adsorption and separation related to wastewater treatments and purifications. We look forward to receiving your contributions from all over the world.
Dr. Tengyao Jiang
Dr. Wei Huang
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- wastewater treatments
- heavy metals
- organic contaminants
- porous materials
- adsorption
- composites
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Planned Papers
The below list represents only planned manuscripts. Some of these manuscripts have not been received by the Editorial Office yet. Papers submitted to MDPI journals are subject to peer-review.
Title: Application of corn straw from agro-industrial waste to remove dyes from an aqueous medium
Authors: Andressa dos Santos1, Anne R. Sotiles1, Camila A. Soares1 and Fauze J. Anaissi1,*
Affiliation: 1Chemistry Department, Universidade Estadual do Centro-Oeste, UNICENTRO, 85040-167, Guarapuava, Paraná, Brazil.
Abstract: The
rapid population growth and extend industrial activities, have damaged the quality of water
resources, affecting the ecosystem. These contaminants include dyes that even at low
concentrations, may cause a series of advers e effects in humans and animals, and your r emoval
by adsorption metho ds using alternative adsorbents as natural fibers , is regarded are a research
topic that has become increasingly relevant. Furthermore, t he dyeing artificial in fibers can be
being an important indicator of its final value decorative and achieve a rich color system. In
this study, corn straw (CS), an agro industrial residue, was used to remove dye from an aqueous
medium. The samples were characterized by vibrational spe ctroscopy (FTIR) and colorimetry
(CIE L*a*b*), before and after dye removal. The analyzes make it possible to identify the
presence of dye on the adsorbent surface of the CS , and scanning electron microscopy (SEM)
images allowed us to differentiate the mor phology of CS. Preliminary adsorption data show an
increase in removal percentage when alkaline treatment was applied, CS alk q max = 11.23 mg g 1
(97 16 %). After the dye removal step, the samples were characterized (by FTIR) and revealed
the presence of dye adsorbed on the CS. The characterization complementary and adsorption
tests are being held to ascertain the methylene blue adsorption and dyeing effe ctiveness in the
corn straw residue.