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Efficacy of Protein Extracts of Moringa oleifera and Benincasa hispida Seeds for the Treatment of Microplastics

Asian Journal of Chemistry 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Pragya Agarwal, Satya Prakash, Gaurav Saini

Summary

Researchers tested protein extracts from Moringa oleifera and Benincasa hispida seeds as natural coagulants for removing microplastics from water. Moringa extracts achieved 94% removal efficiency at a dosage of 30 mL/L, while Benincasa hispida reached 88% removal at 40 mL/L under neutral pH conditions. The study suggests these plant-based coagulants could serve as effective, sustainable, and affordable alternatives to synthetic chemicals for microplastic treatment in water systems.

Microplastics are emerging contaminants and have found significant interest due to their pervasive nature and potential health impacts on different life forms. A number of methods have been investigated so far, including the use of synthetic and recently natural coagulants, however, protein extracts derived from plant-based materials have not been extensively studied for such applications. Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop a sustainable treatment technology for the removal of microplastics. In this study, coagulation experiments were conducted under varying conditions such as pH, coagulant type and concentration using jar test apparatus for removal of microplastics from aqueous samples. The proteins extracted from two natural coagulants, Moringa oleifera and Benincasa hispida, have been studied for the removal of microplastics in aqueous samples. It was found that M. oleifera protein extracts achieved microplastics removal of 94.14 ± 11.0% at a dosage of 30 mL/L whereas B. hispida protein extracts achieved 88.29 ± 10.7% removal at 40 mL/L at pH 7. Therefore, the novelty of the study lies in evaluating the impact of M. oleifera and B. hispida seed protein extracts for the removal of microplastics. The findings suggest that the M. oleifera and B. hispida can be effective, sustainable, eco-friendly and affordable alternatives to chemical coagulants for treatment of microplastics in aqueous systems.

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