We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Papers
61,005 resultsShowing papers similar to Chitosan: A Novel Approach and Sustainable Way to Remove Contaminants and Treat Wastewater
ClearChitin and Chitosan in Wastewater Treatment
This review examines how chitosan — a biodegradable material derived from crustacean shells — and its modified nanocomposites can be used to remove microplastics, heavy metals, and pesticides from wastewater. Chitosan-based materials show strong promise as low-cost, eco-friendly water treatment additives, though challenges around mechanical strength and acid stability still need to be overcome before widespread deployment.
Developments and application of chitosan-based adsorbents for wastewater treatments
This review examines the use of chitosan, a natural material derived from crustacean shells, as an adsorbent for removing pollutants from wastewater. Researchers found that chitosan-based composites, especially those enhanced with nanoparticles, are effective at removing metals, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, and microplastics from water. The material's low cost, biodegradability, and versatility make it a promising tool for addressing water contamination worldwide.
Adsorption of Organic Pollutants from Wastewater Using Chitosan-Based Adsorbents
This review examines how chitosan, a natural material made from shrimp and crab shells, can be used to remove organic pollutants including microplastics from wastewater. Different modified forms of chitosan can effectively absorb a range of contaminants like antibiotics, pesticides, and plastic particles from water. Since chitosan is biodegradable and non-toxic, it offers a sustainable alternative to chemical-based water treatment methods for reducing human exposure to microplastics and other pollutants.
Advances in Chitosan-Based Materials for Application in Catalysis and Adsorption of Emerging Contaminants
This review covers how chitosan, a natural material derived from shellfish shells, can be used to remove emerging contaminants including microplastics, pharmaceuticals, and PFAS chemicals from water. Chitosan-based materials can be shaped into particles, membranes, and gels that effectively absorb a wide range of pollutants, offering a more sustainable alternative to conventional water treatment methods for reducing human exposure to harmful contaminants.
Biopolymeric Nanocomposites for Wastewater Remediation: An Overview on Recent Progress and Challenges
This review examines how nanocomposites made from natural biopolymers like chitosan can be used to filter pollutants including microplastics out of wastewater. These biodegradable materials offer a more sustainable alternative to traditional water treatment methods, which matters for human health because cleaner wastewater means fewer microplastics reaching drinking water sources.
Crustacean nanochitosan-based bioremediation of nanoplastic-polluted aquatic habitat: A review pursuant to SDG 6
Researchers reviewed how nanochitosan — a natural material made from crustacean shells — can capture and remove micro- and nanoplastics from water. While the material shows strong promise as a sustainable cleanup tool, challenges around scaling up production and cost-effectiveness must be solved before it can be widely used in water treatment systems.
Utilization of chitosan as a natural coagulant for polyethylene microplastic removal
Scientists tested chitosan, a natural material derived from shellfish, as an eco-friendly way to remove polyethylene microplastics from water. Under the best conditions (pH 6.0 with 100 mg/L of chitosan), the treatment removed 81.5% of microplastics, offering a promising and environmentally safe approach to cleaning microplastic-contaminated water.
Interaction of chitosan with nanoplastic in water: The effect of environmental conditions, particle properties, and potential for in situ remediation
Researchers tested chitosan — a natural polymer derived from shellfish — as a tool to aggregate and remove nanoplastic particles from water, finding it caused clumping at low doses but that high pH, dissolved organic matter, and surface chemistry of the plastics all affected its performance. The results suggest chitosan-based treatment has real potential for water remediation but requires careful tuning of environmental conditions.
Advances in chitin and chitosan-based materials for microplastics treatment
This review summarizes advances in using chitin and chitosan-based materials for removing microplastics from wastewater. Researchers highlight that while these natural biopolymers offer promising adsorption capabilities due to their functional groups, challenges such as low selectivity and limited mechanical strength have constrained practical use. The study covers various treatment approaches including adsorption, coagulation-flocculation, membrane filtration, and air flotation technologies.
Synergistic removal of microplastic fibres: Integrating Chitosan coagulation in hybrid water pre-treatment systems
Microplastic fibers are the most common type of microplastic found entering water treatment plants, yet their elongated shape makes them especially hard to remove with conventional filters. This study investigated using chitosan — a natural, biodegradable material derived from crustacean shells — as a "green" coagulant to clump fibers together so they can be more easily removed, and also developed chemically modified versions of chitosan that work across a wider range of water conditions. The results showed that combining chitosan-based coagulation with microbubble aeration creates a synergistic pretreatment system that significantly improves microplastic fiber removal while avoiding the residual metal ions left by conventional chemical coagulants.
The use of chitosan for water purification from microplastics
Researchers investigated chitosan as a sorbent for removing microplastics from water, analyzing its physicochemical properties and proposing an optimized purification method based on chitosan's sorption characteristics.
Optimisation of Chitosan as A Natural Flocculant for Microplastic Remediation
Laboratory tests found that chitosan — a natural, biodegradable material derived from shellfish — can remove 68.3% of microplastics from water using a coagulation-flocculation process, with an optimal concentration of 30 ppm. Higher chitosan doses increased organic matter in the water (COD and BOD), suggesting a trade-off between microplastic removal efficiency and water quality parameters. Chitosan offers a promising eco-friendly alternative to synthetic chemicals for treating microplastic-contaminated water.
Coagulative removal of microplastics from aqueous matrices: Recent progresses and future perspectives
This review examines how coagulation, a common water treatment technique, can be used to remove microplastics from water. Researchers compared the effectiveness of different coagulants, finding that natural options like chitosan and protein-based coagulants achieved removal rates above 90 percent. The study highlights the promise of natural coagulants as a more sustainable approach to tackling microplastic contamination in water treatment systems.
Chitosan Biopolymer and Its Nanocomposites: Emerging Material as Adsorbent in Wastewater Treatment
This review examines chitosan biopolymer and its nanocomposites as emerging adsorbent materials for wastewater treatment, highlighting their high adsorption capacity and surface charge for efficiently removing various pollutants from contaminated water.
Optimizing biocoagulant aid from shrimp shells (Litopenaeus vannamei) for enhancing microplastics removal from aqueous solutions
This study investigated chitosan derived from shrimp shell waste as a biocoagulant for removing microplastics from water, optimizing the coagulation-flocculation process to maximize particle capture. The results showed high removal efficiency, offering a biodegradable and sustainable approach to microplastic water treatment.
Biodegradable Nanomaterials For Removal Of Microplastics Removal In Aquatic Ecosystems
This study explores the potential of biodegradable nanomaterials made from natural polymers like chitosan, cellulose, and lignin to remove microplastics from water. These materials have high surface areas and can be engineered to selectively attract and capture plastic particles through surface interactions. The approach offers a greener alternative to conventional filtration and chemical treatment methods, which are often energy-intensive and can create secondary pollution.
Chitosan-Based Polymer Nanocomposites for Environmental Remediation of Mercury Pollution
This review examines how chitosan-based polymer nanocomposites can be used to remove mercury pollution from water and air. Researchers highlight that chitosan, derived from crustacean shells, has strong adsorption properties that can be enhanced through composite materials to capture mercury at very low concentrations. The findings point to chitosan nanocomposites as a promising, sustainable option for environmental mercury remediation.
Bioadsorbents for removal of microplastics from water ecosystems: a review
This review analyzes over 200 studies on using natural biological materials, called bioadsorbents, to remove microplastics from water. Researchers found that materials like chitosan, biochar, and cellulose show strong potential for capturing microplastic particles from contaminated water. The study highlights bioadsorbents as a promising, eco-friendly alternative to conventional water treatment methods for addressing microplastic pollution.
A Comprehensive Review of Natural Polymer‐Based Adsorbents for Microplastic Removal
This review evaluates natural polymer-based materials, including chitosan, cellulose, and alginate, as adsorbents for removing microplastics from water. Researchers found that these renewable materials can achieve removal efficiencies often above 90% through mechanisms including physical interception, hydrophobic interactions, and electrostatic attraction, making them promising candidates for sustainable water treatment systems.
Synergistic removal of microplastic fibres using hybrid pre-treatment: evaluation of Chitosan as a green coagulant
Researchers evaluated the capacity of existing water treatment pre-treatment methods to remove microplastic fibers and investigated chitosan — a low-molecular-weight, 75-85% deacetylated green coagulant — as an alternative to conventional chemical coagulants. The study assessed a hybrid pre-treatment approach, finding synergistic microplastic fiber removal efficiency when chitosan was combined with existing processes.
Environmental implications of Chitosan nanostructures
This review examines the environmental implications of chitosan nanostructures, focusing on the biopolymer's chemical and mechanical modification capabilities that enable its use in advanced membrane adsorbent applications. Researchers found that chitosan's unique properties make it a promising sustainable alternative material for environmental remediation, particularly given its biodegradable nature compared to synthetic polymer-based adsorbents.
Chitosan-based Biogenic Nanoparticles for Wastewater Remediation: Synthesis, Characterization, and Applications - A Review
This review synthesizes research on chitosan-based biogenic nanoparticles for wastewater remediation, covering synthesis routes, physicochemical characterization, and applications leveraging chitosan's biodegradability and unique surface chemistry for removal of pollutants from water.
Chitosan with Natural Additives as a Potential Food Packaging
Researchers reviewed the potential of chitosan, a natural polymer derived from chitin, as a sustainable alternative to conventional plastic food packaging. Chitosan-based materials combined with natural additives show promising antimicrobial and biocompatible properties while being biodegradable. The study suggests these materials could help reduce plastic packaging waste and the associated microplastic pollution from food industry sources.
Biocompatible materials as a sustainable solution to micro- and nanoplastic remediation and their challenges
This review evaluates biocompatible materials—including chitosan, cellulose, and biopolymers—as sustainable sorbents for removing micro- and nanoplastics from water, highlighting their advantages of biodegradability and low toxicity compared to conventional treatment media.