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Recent Progress of Remediating Heavy Metal Contaminated Soil Using Layered Double Hydroxides as Super-Stable Mineralizer

CHIMIA International Journal for Chemistry 2023 6 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lin Tong, Lin Tong, Wei Chen, Haoran Wang, Tianyang Shen, Wei Chen, Tianyang Shen, Zhuoqun Deng, Wei Chen, Zhuoqun Deng, Wei Chen, Ruifa Chai, Wei Chen, Ruifa Chai, Xinyuan Sun, Yu‐Fei Song Xinyuan Sun, Dongyuan Cui, Dongyuan Cui, Sai An, Wei Chen, Lin Tong, Lin Tong, Yu‐Fei Song

Summary

This review covers the use of layered double hydroxides (LDHs) as "super-stable mineralizers" for remediating heavy metal contamination in soil. It is not about microplastics and is a false positive for microplastic relevance.

Heavy metal contamination in soil, which is harmful to both ecosystem and mankind, has attracted worldwide attention from the academic and industrial communities. However, the most-widely used remediation technologies such as electrochemistry, elution, and phytoremediation. suffer from either secondary pollution, long cycle time or high cost. In contrast, in situ mineralization technology shows great potential due to its universality, durability and economical efficiency. As such, the development of mineralizers with both high efficiency and low-cost is the core of in situmineralization. In 2021, the concept of 'Super-Stable Mineralization' was proposed for the first time by Kong et al.[1] The layered double hydroxides (denoted as LDHs), with the unique host-guest intercalated structure and multiple interactions between the host laminate and the guest anions, are considered as an ideal class of materials for super-stable mineralization. In this review, we systematically summarize the application of LDHs in the treatment of heavy metal contaminated soil from the view of: 1) the structure-activity relationship of LDHs in in situ mineralization, 2) the advantages of LDHs in mineralizing heavy metals, 3) the scale-up preparation of LDHs-based mineralizers and 4) the practical application of LDHs in treating contaminated soil. At last, we highlight the challenges and opportunities for the rational design of LDH-based mineralizer in the future.

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