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Lignocellulosic pruning waste adsorbents to remove emerging contaminants from tyre wear and pharmaceuticals present in wastewater in circular economy scenario

Agricultural Water Management 2024 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
J. Lladó, Ana M. Díaz, Núria López-Vinent, Sandra Pérez, Nicola Montemurro, Alberto Cruz-Alcalde, Concepción Lao Luque, E. Fuente, B. Ruíz

Summary

Researchers converted poplar pruning waste into activated carbons using potassium hydroxide activation and demonstrated that these low-cost, high-surface-area materials (up to 1,336 m²/g) effectively remove tire-derived chemicals and pharmaceuticals from water, supporting circular economy approaches to emerging contaminant treatment.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The following work explores a sustainable approach to repurpose organic waste from poplar pruning into lignocellulosic waste-based activated carbons (LPWACs) through environmentally friendly thermochemical processes and in line with circular economy principles. The developed LPWACs, activated by potassium hydroxide (KOH) at two different temperatures and weight ratios, exhibited promising textural properties with BET surface area (SBET) and total pore volume (VTOT) reaching up to 1336 m2·g-1 and 0.588 cm3·g-1, respectively. In addition, they displayed a developed microporous structure with a significant oxygen content (up to 11 %). These activated carbons were used to remove five emerging organic pollutants from the leaching of tyre wear particles (TWPs) and pharmaceuticals present in water. The increase in oxygen groups had a negative effect on the adsorption capacity of 1H-benzotriazole (BZTL), while electrostatic influences hindered diatrizoic acid (DZT) adsorption. LPWACs effectively remove pharmaceutical and tyre contaminants, supporting the circular economy in water treatment.

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