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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 924: 171578, 2024 May 10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38460681

Occurrence of contaminants in water is one of the major global concerns humanity is still facing today: most of them are extremely toxic and dangerous for human health, obliging their removal for a proper and correct process of sanitation. Among wastewater treatment technologies, in the view of development of sustainable and environmentally friendly processes, membrane adsorption has proved to be a fast and simple method in the removal of pollutants, offering great contaminants recovery percentages, fast adsorbent regeneration and recycle, and easy scale-up. Due to their large surface area and tunable chemistry, carbon nanotubes (CNTs)-based materials revealed to be extraordinary adsorbents, exceeding by far performances of ordinary organic and inorganic membranes such as polyethersulfone, polyvinylidene fluoride, polytetrafluoroethylene, ceramics, currently employed in membrane technologies for wastewater treatment. In consideration of this, the review aims to summarize recent developments in the field of carbon nanotubes-based materials for pollutants recovery from water through adsorption processes. After a brief introduction concerning what adsorption phenomenon is and how it is performed and governed by using carbon nanotubes-based materials, the review discusses into detail the employment of three common typologies of CNTs-based materials (CNTs powders, CNTs-doped polymeric membranes and CNTs membranes) in adsorption process for the removal of water pollutants. Particularly focus will be devoted on the emergent category of self-standing CNTs membranes (buckypapers), made entirely of carbon nanotubes, exhibiting superior performances than CNTs and CNTs-doped polymeric membranes in terms of preparation strategy, recovery percentages of pollutants and regeneration possibilities. The extremely encouraging results presented in this review aim to support and pave the way to the introduction of alternative and more efficient pathways in wastewater treatment technologies to contrast the problem of water pollution.

2.
Molecules ; 28(15)2023 Aug 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37570862

The conjugation of polyphenols is a valuable strategy with which to confer tailored properties to polymeric materials of biomedical interest. Within this investigation, we aim to explore the possibility to use this synthetic approach to increase the viscosity of conjugates, thus allowing the release of a loaded therapeutic to be better controlled over time than in neat polyphenols. Curcumin (CUR) was conjugated to sodium alginate (CA) and chitosan (CS) with functionalisation degrees of 9.2 (SA-CUR) and 15.4 (CS-CUR) mg g-1. Calorimetric analyses showed higher degrees of chain rigidity upon conjugation, with a shift of the degradation peaks to higher temperatures (from 239 to 245 °C and from 296 to 303 °C for SA-CUR and CS-CUR, respectively). Rheological analyses were used to prove the enhanced interconnection between the polymer chains in the conjugates, confirmed by the weak gel parameters, A and z. Moreover, the typical non-Newtonian behaviour of the high-molecular-weight polysaccharides was recorded, together with an enhancement of the activation energy, Ea, in CS-CUR vs. CS (opposite behaviour recorded for SA-CUR vs. SA). The evaluation of the delivery performance (of Doxorubicin as a model drug) showed sustained release profiles, opening opportunities for the development of controlled delivery systems.


Chitosan , Curcumin , Nanoparticles , Curcumin/chemistry , Chitosan/chemistry , Alginates/chemistry , Drug Delivery Systems , Polymers , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Drug Carriers/chemistry , Drug Liberation
3.
J Hazard Mater ; 445: 130554, 2023 Mar 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36635918

This study presents a mathematical model describing the adsorption-desorption process of water dissolved elements onto reactive porous materials during filtering operations performed under dynamic flow conditions. The developed model is based on a reversible second order adsorption kinetic featuring the progressive reduction of the purifying capacity of the filtering material due to the gradual exhaustion of the active sites available for solute retention. It enables the simulation of the performances of water filtering systems through the use of parameters having a clear chemical-physical significance or it can be used for the estimation of these parameters to characterize the adsorption properties of the reactive material. Starting from the same adsorptive conceptual model used for the filtering system marked by ongoing flowing conditions, an adaptation for static systems was performed on the mathematical framework in order to process the same chemical physical parameters in both schemes. Adsorption laboratory tests were carried out to validate the developed model. Results show that the kinetic constants and adsorption capacities (a maximum of about 45 mg g-1 was obtained for the tested material) are highly comparable, both within the same experimental system, and between different experimental setup. This confirms the validity of the developed model which is able to perfectly fit the observed concentration data in all tested configurations.

4.
Molecules ; 27(22)2022 Nov 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36431774

Pharmaceutical products such as antibiotics, analgesics, steroids, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are new emerging pollutants, often present in wastewater, potentially able to contaminate drinking water resources. Adsorption is considered the cheapest and most effective technique for the removal of pollutants from water, and, recently, membranes obtained by wet filtration method of SWCNT aqueous solutions (SWCNT buckypapers, SWCNT BPs) have been proposed as self-standing porous adsorbents. In this paper, the ability of graphene oxide/single-walled carbon nanotube composite membranes (GO-SWCNT BPs) to remove some important NSAIDs, namely Diclofenac, Ketoprofen, and Naproxen, was investigated at different pH conditions (pH 4, 6, and 8), graphene oxide amount (0, 20, 40, 60, and 75 wt.%), and initial NSAIDs concentration (1, 10, and 50 ppm). For the same experimental conditions, the adsorption capacities were found to strongly depend on the graphene oxide content. The best results were obtained for 75 wt.% graphene oxide with an adsorption capacity of 118 ± 2 mg g-1 for Diclofenac, 116 ± 2 mg g-1 for Ketoprofen, and 126 ± 3 mg g-1 for Naproxen at pH 4. Overall, the reported data suggest that GO-SWCNT BPs can represent a promising tool for a cheap and fast removal of NSAIDs from drinking water resources, with easy recovery and reusability features.


Drinking Water , Environmental Pollutants , Ketoprofen , Diclofenac/chemistry , Ketoprofen/chemistry , Naproxen/chemistry , Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/chemistry
5.
RSC Adv ; 12(44): 28318-28340, 2022 Oct 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36320515

Although the discovery of plastic in the last century has brought enormous benefits to daily activities, it must be said that its use produces countless environmental problems that are difficult to solve. The indiscriminate use and the increase in industrial production of cleaning, cosmetic, packaging, fertilizer, automotive, construction and pharmaceutical products have introduced tons of plastics and microplastics into the environment. The latter are of greatest concern due to their size and their omnipresence in the various environmental sectors. Today, they represent a contaminant of increasing ecotoxicological interest especially in aquatic environments due to their high stability and diffusion. In this regard, this critical review aims to describe the different sources of microplastics, emphasizing their effects in aquatic ecosystems and the danger to the health of living beings, while examining, at the same time, those few modelling studies conducted to estimate the future impact of plastic towards the marine ecosystem. Furthermore, this review summarizes the latest scientific advances related to removal techniques, evaluating their advantages and disadvantages. The final purpose is to highlight the great environmental problem that we are going to face in the coming decades, and the need to develop appropriate strategies to invert the current scenario as well as better performing removal techniques to minimize the environmental impacts of microplastics.

6.
Molecules ; 27(13)2022 Jun 23.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35807300

Water decontamination is an important challenge resulting from the incorrect disposal of heavy metal waste into the environment. Among the different available techniques (e.g., filtration, coagulation, precipitation, and ion-exchange), adsorption is considered the cheapest and most effective procedure for the removal of water pollutants. In the last years, several materials have been tested for the removal of heavy metals from water, including metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), and graphene oxide (GO). Nevertheless, their powder consistency, which makes the recovery and reuse after adsorption difficult, is the main drawback for these materials. More recently, SWCNT buckypapers (SWCNT BPs) have been proposed as self-standing porous membranes for filtration and adsorption processes. In this paper, the adsorption capacity and selectivity of Pb2+ (both from neat solutions and in the presence of other interferents) by SWCNT BPs were evaluated as a function of the increasing amount of GO used in their preparation (GO-SWCNT buckypapers). The highest adsorption capacity, 479 ± 25 mg g-1, achieved for GO-SWCNT buckypapers with 75 wt.% of graphene oxide confirmed the effective application of such materials for cheap and fast water decontamination from lead.


Graphite , Metals, Heavy , Nanotubes, Carbon , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Adsorption , Decontamination , Technology , Water , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
7.
ACS Appl Nano Mater ; 5(4): 5223-5233, 2022 Apr 22.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35492436

The search for efficient technologies empowering the selective capture of environmentally harmful heavy metals from wastewater treatment plants, at affordable prices, attracts wide interest but constitutes an important technological challenge. We report here an eco-friendly single-walled carbon nanotube buckypaper (SWCNT-BP) enriched with a multivariate amino acid-based metal-organic framework (MTV-MOF) for the efficient and selective removal of Pb2+ in multicomponent water systems. Pristine MTV-MOF was easily immobilized within the porous network of entangled SWCNTs, thus obtaining a stable self-standing adsorbing membrane filter (MTV-MOF/SWCNT-BP). SWCNT-BP alone shows a moderately good removal performance with a maximum adsorption capacity of 180 mg·g-1 and a considerable selectivity for Pb(II) ions in highly concentrated multi-ion solutions over a wide range of lead concentration (from 200 to 10000 ppb). Remarkably, these features were outperformed with the hybrid membrane filter MTV-MOF/SWCNT-BP, exhibiting enhanced selectivity and adsorption capacity (310 mg·g-1, which is up to 42% higher than that of the neat SWCNT-BP) and consequently enabling a more efficient and selective removal of Pb2+ from aqueous media. MTV-MOF/SWCNT-BP was able to reduce [Pb2+] from the dangerous 1000 ppb level to acceptable limits for drinking water, below 10 ppb, as established by the current EPA and WHO limits. Thus, the eco-friendly composite MTV-MOF/SWCNT-BP shows the potential to be effectively used several times as a reliable adsorbent for Pb2+ removal for household drinking water or in industrial treatment plants for water and wastewater lead decontamination.

8.
Membranes (Basel) ; 10(7)2020 Jul 20.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32698318

Photocatalytic materials, such as WO3, TiO2, and ZnO nanoparticles, are commonly linked onto porous polymer membranes for wastewater treatment, fouling mitigation and permeation enhancement. Buckypapers (BPs) are entanglements of carbon nanotubes, which have been recently proposed as innovative filtration systems thanks to their mechanical, electronic, and thermal properties. In this work, flexible membranes of single wall carbon nanotubes are prepared and characterized as efficient substrates to deposit by chemical vapor deposition thin layers of WO3 and obtain, in such a way, WO3/BP composite membranes for application in advanced oxidation processes. The photocatalytic efficiency of WO3/BP composite membranes is tested against model pollutants in a small continuous flow reactor and compared with the performance of an equivalent homogeneous WO3-based reactor.

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