Recent Advances on Chemically Functionalized Cellulose-Based Materials for Arsenic Removal in Wastewater: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Selective Studies on the Extraction of Cellulose from Various Sources
3. Brief History of Arsenic
4. Functionalised Cellulose for Removal of Arsenic
4.1. Preparation of Functionalised Cellulose
4.2. Adsorption Capacity of Functionalised Cellulose Materials
5. Conclusions and Future Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Source of Cellulose | Type of Cellulose | Cellulose Extraction Method | Extraction Conditions | Results Obtained | Refs. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date pits (DP) | Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) | Two methods were used: mechanical stirrer method (CNCs1) and soxhlet apparatus method (CNCs2) |
|
| [87] |
Robinia pseudoacacia seed fibres | Cellulose fibres immobilised onto chitosan beads | Cellulose was extracted using methods by Gao et al. [25] and Almutairi et al. [32], with slight modifications; extracted cellulose was filtered and blended with chitosan at variable composition ratios |
|
| [88] |
Bean forage | Cellulose nanocrystals | Two response surface superimposition methodologies were used with a rotatable composite central design (CCD) for both |
|
| [89] |
Banana stem | Cellulose pulp | Alkaline pulping using sodium hydroxide (NaOH) | 17.7% NaOH and 10% EDTA, pulping of banana stem at 100 ± 5 °C for 30 min |
| [90] |
Calotropis gigantea fibre (CGF) | Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) | Combined ball milling defibrillation and SO42−/TiO2 nanosolid superacid catalyst-assisted method | Bleached CGF was milled with superfine zirconium beads in the presence of diluted H2SO4 and the synthesised SO42−/TiO2 catalyst |
| [91] |
Rice straw | Microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) and cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) | Extracted through alkaline treatment, bleaching, and acid hydrolysis, with slight modification to the process described by Chin et al. [26] |
| Extracted CNC appear as long, well-defined rodlike crystals with a high aspect ratio (41). | [92] |
Momordica Charantia plant stem | Cellulose fibres | Manual retting process | Fibres were soaked in water for 4 h, retted, washed with distilled water, sun-dried for 48 h, and oven-dried at 50 °C for 2 h |
| [93] |
Strelitzia reginae (SR) plant stem | Cellulose fibres | Retting process |
|
| [94] |
Eriobotrya japonica leaves | Cellulose | Chemical extraction |
| The final product of the extraction was a crispy and fragile white film. | [95] |
Corn stalk | Corn stalk cellulose (CSC) | Pretreatment technology with immobilised enzyme |
| The cellulose content obtained by immobilised enzyme pretreatment was 96.72%. | [96] |
Sugarcane straw | Cellulose nanocrystals | Purification processes, followed by subsequent preparation of CNCs via sulfuric acid hydrolysis |
|
| [97] |
Populus tremula seed fibres | Cellulose polymeric material | Chemical extraction |
|
| [98] |
Carpet wastes | Cellulose nanofibres (CNFs) | Supercritical carbon dioxide (Sc.CO2) treatment approach |
|
| [99] |
Oat bran fibres | Nanofibrillated cellulose (NFC) | Chemical (i.e., acid, base, and bleach) or hydrothermal (i.e., microwave pretreatments and autoclave), followed by disintegration using high-pressure homogenisation from oat bran fibres |
|
| [100] |
Areca nut husk fibres | Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) | Sulfuric acid hydrolysis |
|
| [101] |
Cellulose Type(s) | Cellulose Functionalisation Procedure | Cellulose-Based Adsorbent | Arsenic Adsorption Capacity | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|
Microfibrillated cellulose (MC), nanocellulose (NC) | Precipitation of magnetite (MG) on an amino terminal branched organic structure (L), either linked by maleic acid residue on NC surface (NC-MA/L) or linked by oxalyl bridge on MC surface (MC-O/L) to produce NC-MA/L-MG and MC-O/L-MG adsorbents, respectively | Magnetite-loaded amino modified nano/microcellulose adsorbents |
| [134] |
Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), microcrystalline cellulose (MCC), hydroxyethyl cellulose (HEC), industrial grade cellulose powder (CP) | 2-line ferrihydrite (FH) nanoparticles were incorporated in the biopolymeric confinement of microcellulose to act as active sites for As(III) and As(V) adsorption | Functionalised microcellulose-reinforced 2-line ferrihydrite composites |
| [135] |
Cellulose fibre | Microwave irradiation (MW) was used to facilitate the grafting of the hyperbranched polyethylenimine (HPEI) coating agent with a large molecular size | Hyperbranched polyethylenimine (HPEI)-modified cellulose fibre (CellMW-HPEI) adsorbent |
| [136] |
Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) | By using the “bridge joint” effect of iron ions, the cellulose-nanocrystal-containing high-performance adsorbents were synthesised via the co-precipitation method, which enhanced the cross-linking action of cellulose nanocrystal and polyethyleneimine (PEI) | Three cellulose nanocrystal-containing adsorbents were prepared |
| |
Nanocellulose | pH-sensitive nanoparticles were synthesized via a simple single-graft method, in which nanocellulose treated with 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine 1-oxyl (TEMPO-NC) was cross-linked with glutaraldehyde (GA) and polyethyleneimine (PEI) | pH-sensitive nanoparticle based on nanocellulose, involving cross-linking polyethyleneimine and glutaraldehyde | The As(V) adsorption capacity of the nanoparticles reached approximately 255.19 mg g−1 at pH 3, which was five times greater than that achieved with the As(V) solution at its initial pH (44.33 mg g−1). | [137] |
Cellulose | Ethylation of glycidylmethacrylate grafted aminated titanium dioxide densified cellulose (Et-AMPGDC) | Amino-functionalised glycidylmethacrylate-grafted-titanium dioxide densified cellulose for the adsorptive removal of arsenic(V) from aqueous solutions | The maximum adsorption capacity was evaluated to be 108.70 mg/g. | [138] |
Cellulose filter paper | 3-mercapto-propanoic acid (MPA) was covalently grafted to the cellulose filter paper (Cell) by esterification process through the formation of O-acylisourea intermediate | 3-mercapto-propanoic acid (MPA)-modified cellulose filter paper (MPA–Cell paper) for arsenate removal from drinking water | The modified cellulose filter paper performed well at nearly a neutral pH, for arsenate removal through adsorption, and demonstrated a significant arsenate uptake capacity of 92.59 mg/g. | [139] |
Cellulose sponge | Cellulose sponge was modified by coating with magnetite microparticles and then used as an effective adsorbent for the elimination of As(V) from aqueous solution | Magnetite microparticles decorated cellulose sponge as an efficacious filter for improved arsenic(V) removal | The maximum adsorption capacity of the adsorbent was 349.9 mg/g, which is substantially higher than the results from previous reports. | [140] |
Nanocrystalline cellulose (NCC) | Nanocrystalline cellulose (NCC) was selectively oxidised using sodium periodate followed by grafting of diethylene triamine (DETA) to obtain their amine derivatives in 80–85% yield | Diethylene triamine grafted dialdehyde nanocrystalline cellulose (DETA-g-DA-NCC) for As(III and V) removal from aqueous solution | The adsorption capacities were 10.56 and 12.06 mg/g for As(III) and As(V), respectively. | [141] |
Cellulose | The Fe(III)-AM-PGMACell was prepared through graft copolymerisation of glycidyl methacrylate (GMA) onto cellulose (Cell) in the presence of N,N′-methylenebisacrylamide (MBA) as a cross linker using benzoyl peroxide initiator, followed by treatment with ethylenediamine and ferric chloride in the presence of HCl | Iron(III)-coordinated amino-functionalised poly(glycidyl methacrylate)-grafted cellulose (Fe(III)-AM-PGMACell) for the adsorption of arsenic(V) from aqueous solutions |
| [142] |
Cellulose | Cross-linked dithiocarbamate-modified cellulose sorbents cross-linked with epoxy or complexed with iron, and the quantities of the modifiers were varied between 3.0 and 10 mol% | Dithiocarbamate (DTC) modified cellulose sorbents that can selectively arsenite AsIII ions separate from water | The maximum sorption capacity of the epoxy-cross-linked sorbent, calculated from the Langmuir isotherm equation, was 600 μmol g−1 (45 mg g−1) at 25 °C. | [143] |
Wheat straw cellulose | Fluorophore, 3-bromofluoranthene was grafted on cellulose (BF@CFs) for removal of arsenite As(III) ions in water | Fluoranthene decorated fluorescent nanofibrous cellulose probe (BF@CFs) |
| [144] |
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Motloung, M.T.; Magagula, S.I.; Kaleni, A.; Sikhosana, T.S.; Lebelo, K.; Mochane, M.J. Recent Advances on Chemically Functionalized Cellulose-Based Materials for Arsenic Removal in Wastewater: A Review. Water 2023, 15, 793. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15040793
Motloung MT, Magagula SI, Kaleni A, Sikhosana TS, Lebelo K, Mochane MJ. Recent Advances on Chemically Functionalized Cellulose-Based Materials for Arsenic Removal in Wastewater: A Review. Water. 2023; 15(4):793. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15040793
Chicago/Turabian StyleMotloung, Mary T., Sifiso I. Magagula, Andiswa Kaleni, Tlholohelo S. Sikhosana, Kgomotso Lebelo, and Mokgaotsa J. Mochane. 2023. "Recent Advances on Chemically Functionalized Cellulose-Based Materials for Arsenic Removal in Wastewater: A Review" Water 15, no. 4: 793. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15040793
APA StyleMotloung, M. T., Magagula, S. I., Kaleni, A., Sikhosana, T. S., Lebelo, K., & Mochane, M. J. (2023). Recent Advances on Chemically Functionalized Cellulose-Based Materials for Arsenic Removal in Wastewater: A Review. Water, 15(4), 793. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15040793