This review article compares various sustainable adsorbents for removing pollutants from water. It covers natural, carbon, waste, biomass, biopolymer, nanocomposite-based adsorbents, as well as metallic organic frameworks and other novel materials. The review discusses characterization, modification, adsorption capacities, isotherm models, kinetics, and the impact of factors like pH, temperature, and particle size. It also addresses adsorbent formulation, optimization, cost-effectiveness, thermodynamic parameters, regeneration, reusability, molecular modeling, and future perspectives.
Author(s): Dehghani, Mohammad Hadi; Ahmadi, Shabnam; Ghosh, Soumya; Othmani, Amina; Osagie, Christian; Meskini, Maryam; AlKafaas, Samar Sami; Malloum, Alhadji; Khanday, Waheed Ahmad;
Jacob, Ajala Oluwaseun; Gökkuş, Ömür; Oroke, Andrew; Martins, Obialor; Karri, Rama Rao; Lima , Eder C.
Published: 2023
Language: English
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Additional Information
This review article evaluates and compares the efficiency of various sustainable adsorbents for the removal of noxious pollutants from water environments. This study discusses the various types of adsorbents concerning their performance and suitability. Adsorbent types include natural-based, carbon-based, waste-based, biomass-based, biopolymers-based, and nanocomposites-based adsorbents, as well as metallic organic frameworks, aerogels, networking crystalline solids, zeolite nanoparticles, and dendrimers were reviewed. Characterisation, modification, fabrication, adsorption capacities under different conditions, isotherm models, and kinetics of noxious pollutants were also reviewed. Adsorption capacities for different pH values, adsorbent doses, adsorbent concentrations, temperature, and the size of particles have been described. One of the basic needs in water and wastewater adsorbents is their formulation and optimisation, using columnar operations, and more importantly, they can be produced quickly and should be cost-effective. Various studies reported a broad range of values for the thermodynamic parameters for noxious pollutants, suggesting the adsorbent's nature as an essential factor affecting the thermodynamics of noxious pollutant sorption. The regeneration and reusability potential of other adsorbents have also been discussed, along with molecular modelling, simulation, knowledge gaps, and future perspectives of noxious pollutants from the water environments.