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Lignin/Poly(vinylalcohol) Hydrogel for Detectingand Effectively Removing Microplastics
Summary
Researchers synthesized a biobased lignin/poly(vinyl alcohol) hydrogel from aminated bamboo-derived lignin and demonstrated its ability to detect and adsorb polystyrene microplastics, achieving a maximum adsorption capacity of 288.6 mg per gram following pseudo-second-order kinetics and Langmuir isotherm behavior. The hydrogel retained 87.64 percent of its adsorption efficiency after five regeneration cycles, demonstrating its potential as a reusable, sustainable adsorbent for microplastic removal from water.
This study presents the synthesis of a biobased hydrogel derived from aminated lignin and poly(vinyl alcohol), where the lignin was extracted from bamboo powder and functionalized through phenolization and ammoniation. The hydrogel was characterized using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), in situ Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and N2 adsorption–desorption isotherms. Its adsorption performance was evaluated for polystyrene microplastics (PSMP), demonstrating a high maximum adsorption capacity of 288.6 mg/g. The adsorption kinetics followed a pseudo-second-order model, while the equilibrium data aligned with the Langmuir isotherm, indicating monolayer adsorption. Remarkably, the hydrogel retained 87.64% of its adsorption efficiency after five regeneration cycles. Beyond PSMPs, the hydrogel also exhibited effective adsorption for four other microplastic typespolyethylene (PEMP), polypropylene (PPMP), polyvinyl chloride (PVCMP), and polyamide (PAMP)at low concentrations (10 mg/L). In real-world water matrices, the adsorption rates for PSMPs and PAMP were as follows: 92.7% and 96.7% in lake water, 94.7% and 98.5% in pipeline water, 97.1% and 99.2% in river water, and 97.9% and 99.7% in sludge supernatant. This work provides foundational data for microplastic removal across diverse environmental media and proposes an eco-friendly, sustainable, and efficient strategy for designing biobased adsorbents targeting low-concentration, small-sized microplastics.