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Fe-Modified Sewage Sludge Biochar for Efficient Removal of Nanoplastics from Water: Mechanistic Insights and Multi-Pathway Adsorption Analysis

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Minyan Wang, Minyan Wang, Jing Zhang, Jing Zhang, Junjie Zhang, Junjie Zhang, Shuai Wu, Shengye Ou, Cheng Shen, Chan Zhang, Jin Zhang, Zhangtao Li, Chan Zhang, Jin Zhang

Summary

Scientists developed a new water filter material made from sewage sludge and iron that can remove 96% of tiny plastic particles (called nanoplastics) from water. These microscopic plastic bits are found everywhere in our water supply and may pose health risks, but this new filter works much better than existing methods. This research could lead to better ways to clean nanoplastics from our drinking water while also recycling waste materials.

Nanoplastics (NPs) have emerged as pervasive aquatic pollutants due to their small size, high surface activity, and potential ecological and health risks. Although sludge-derived biochar is a sustainable adsorbent for NP removal, the relative importance of coexisting adsorption mechanisms remains poorly quantified. Here, iron-modified sludge biochar (FeBC) was synthesized and evaluated for NP removal from water. Batch experiments showed that FeBC significantly outperformed pristine biochar, achieving a maximum removal efficiency of 96.09%. Adsorption was strongly pH-dependent, with enhanced removal under acidic conditions due to surface protonation and strengthened electrostatic attraction toward negatively charged NPs. SEM, BET, FTIR, and XPS analyses indicated that electrostatic interactions, hydrogen bonding, π–π interactions, and pore adsorption jointly contributed to NP capture. Importantly, structural equation modeling quantitatively disentangled these mechanisms, revealing electrostatic interactions as the dominant driver (52.6%), followed by hydrogen bonding (23%), pore adsorption (16.6%), and π–π interactions (7.9%), and further identified synergistic and antagonistic relationships among them. These results demonstrate that surface charge regulation governs NP adsorption efficiency, providing a quantitative mechanistic basis for the rational design of biochar-based adsorbents. This study advances a multi-mechanistic framework for understanding and optimizing NP removal while promoting sludge resource valorization.

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