Lignin nanoparticle-decorated nanocellulose cryogels as adsorbents for pharmaceutical pollutants
Autor: | Melissa B. Agustin, Mari Lehtonen, Marianna Kemell, Panu Lahtinen, Erfan Oliaei, Kirsi S. Mikkonen |
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Přispěvatelé: | Department of Food and Nutrition, Food Materials Science Research Group, Department of Chemistry, Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS) |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2023 |
Předmět: |
Environmental Engineering
Chemical/chemistry Water General Medicine Lignin/chemistry Management Monitoring Policy and Law Water Pollutants Chemical/chemistry Lignin nanoparticles 416 Food Science Pharmaceutical pollutants Cryogels/chemistry Multi-component Nanoparticles Environmental Pollutants Water Pollutants Adsorption Cellulose SDG 6 - Clean Water and Sanitation SDG 12 - Responsible Consumption and Production Waste Management and Disposal Cryogels Nanocellulose |
Zdroj: | Agustin, M B, Lehtonen, M, Kemell, M, Lahtinen, P, Oliaei, E & Mikkonen, K S 2023, ' Lignin nanoparticle-decorated nanocellulose cryogels as adsorbents for pharmaceutical pollutants ', Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 330, 117210 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.117210 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.117210 |
Popis: | Adsorption is a relatively simple wastewater treatment method that has the potential to mitigate the impacts of pharmaceutical pollution. This requires the development of reusable adsorbents that can simultaneously remove pharmaceuticals of varying chemical structure and properties. Here, the adsorption potential of nanostructured wood-based adsorbents towards different pharmaceuticals in a multi-component system was investigated. The adsorbents in the form of macroporous cryogels were prepared by anchoring lignin nanoparticles (LNPs) to the nanocellulose network via electrostatic attraction. The naturally anionic LNPs were anchored to cationic cellulose nanofibrils (cCNF) and the cationic LNPs (cLNPs) were combined with anionic TEMPO-oxidized CNF (TCNF), producing two sets of nanocellulose-based cryogels that also differed in their overall surface charge density. The cryogels, prepared by freeze-drying, showed layered cellulosic sheets randomly decorated with spherical lignin on the surface. They exhibited varying selectivity and efficiency in removing pharmaceuticals with differing aromaticity, polarity and ionic characters. Their adsorption potential was also affected by the type (unmodified or cationic), amount and morphology of the lignin nanomaterials, as well as the pH of the pharmaceutical solution. Overall, the findings revealed that LNPs or cLNPs can act as functionalizing and crosslinking agents to nanocellulose-based cryogels. Despite the decrease in the overall positive surface charge, the addition of LNPs to the cCNF-based cryogels showed enhanced adsorption, not only towards the anionic aromatic pharmaceutical diclofenac but also towards the aromatic cationic metoprolol (MPL) and tramadol (TRA) and neutral aromatic carbamazepine. The addition of cLNPs to TCNF-based cryogels improved the adsorption of MPL and TRA despite the decrease in the net negative surface charge. The improved adsorption was attributed to modes of removal other than electrostatic attraction, and they could be 7C-7C aromatic ring or hydrophobic interactions brought by the addition of LNPs or cLNPs. However, significant improvement was only found if the ratio of LNPs or cLNPs to nanocellulose was 0.6:1 or higher and with spherical lignin nanomaterials. As crosslinking agents, the LNPs or cLNPs affected the rheological behavior of the gels, and increased the firmness and decreased the water holding capacity of the corresponding cryogels. The resistance of the cryogels towards disintegration with exposure to water also improved with crosslinking, which eventually enabled the cryogels, especially the TCNF-based one, to be regenerated and reused for five cycles of adsorption-desorption experiment for the model pharmaceutical MPL. Thus, this study opened new opportunities to utilize LNPs in providing nanocellulose-based adsorbents with additional functional groups, which were otherwise often achieved by rigorous chemical modifications, at the same time, crosslinking the nanocellulose network. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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