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Insights into the removal of polystyrene nanoplastics using the contaminated corncob-derived mesoporous biochar from mining area

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2022 123 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Na Zhu, Qian Yan, Yu‐Peng He, Xingyang Wang, Zhina Wei, Dong Liang, Huifeng Yue, Yang Yun, Guangke Li, Nan Sang

Summary

Researchers developed a mesoporous biochar from contaminated corncobs collected in mining areas that effectively adsorbs polystyrene nanoplastics from water, achieving high removal capacity through electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions.

Polymers

Nanoplastic has become a prominent threat to the aquatic ecosystem, and the cost-effective technologies for controlling that are still insufficient. The aim of this study is to use contaminated corncobs collected in mining area to prepare functional mesoporous biochar (MBC) and to investigate its ability to remove polystyrene nanoplastics (PSNPs) from water. The adsorption of PSNPs by MBC could be better described by the Sips isotherm and followed the second-order kinetics, with the theoretical maximum adsorption capacity of MBC for PSNPs was 56.02 mg·g. Then the PSNPs adsorbed on MBC could be hydrothermally degraded and the biochar could be simultaneously regenerated. The ability was affected by various factors, including oxygen-containing functional groups, metallic components, superoxide radicals and holes. The degradation products were dominated as low-molecule-weight oligomers and the main possible pathways involved scission, hydrolysis and radical reaction. The findings highlight the great potential of biochar prepared using contaminated biowaste in mining area to remove the nanoplastic pollutants in the aqueous environment.

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