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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Food & Water Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Agro-Pollutants and their Nano-Remediation from Soil and Water: A Mini-Review

Environment, Biodiversity and Soil Security 2020 10 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Hassan El-Ramady, Ahmed El-Henawy, Megahed Amer, Alaa El-Dein Omara, Tamer Elsakhawy, Abdel-Moety Salama, Ahmed Ezzat, A. F. El‐Sherif, Mohamed Elmahrouk, Tarek Shalaby

Summary

This mini-review examines nano-remediation technologies for removing agricultural pollutants including pesticides, heavy metals, and fertilizers from soil and water. Nanomaterials are also being explored as tools for detecting and removing microplastics from the environment, making this research relevant to plastic pollution management.

Body Systems

The human activities may include the agricultural, industrial and other activities. The agricultural sector is considered the main source for our life’s supplies. Thus,the agriculturalactivities or practices might result many pollutants such as applied mineral fertilizers, pesticides, effluents from domestic and industrial sewages and vehicular emissions.Therefore, a remediation to remove or decrease the pollutants in soil and water is needed for the environmental protection. This remediation has several classic strategies several years ago, but a promising and new approaches have been established particularly nano-remediation. This nano-remediation depends on the applied nanomaterials in removing pollutants from soils and water through nano-bioremediation and nano-phytoremediation. The most important nanomaterials that have the potential in removing pollutants from contaminated soils and water nano-silica, nano-zero-valent of iron, nano-sized ironsulfide particles, nano-ZnO and others. However, many challenges or open questions are still needing a justification because using of nanomaterials in higher concentrations are considered toxic to plants and agro-environment. Are these nanomaterials stable under environmental conditions or will be converted into toxic ones or still need to be identified for sustainablenano-remediation? Is there any possibility to enter the nanomaterials or other toxic compounds the food chain through these plants? Therefore, a lot of further questions and further research are needed concerning the nano-remediation in removal the agro-pollutants.

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