Biopolymer Meets Nanoclay: Rational Fabrication of Superb Adsorption Beads from Green Precursors for Efficient Capture of Pb(II) and Dyes
Jie Qi, Xue Wang, Huan Zhang, Xiangyu Liu, Wenbo Wang, Qingdong He, Fang Guo

TL;DR
Researchers created eco-friendly beads using natural materials to efficiently remove lead and dyes from water.
Contribution
A green ionic crosslinking method was developed to fabricate high-performance adsorbent beads using biopolymers and nanoclay.
Findings
Beads with 0.6% rectorite showed high adsorption capacities for Pb(II) and methylene blue in different water sources.
Beads with 43% rectorite efficiently removed Pb(II) and methylene blue with high capacities.
The composite beads demonstrated excellent recyclability and mass transfer efficiency for contaminant removal.
Abstract
Renewable, green, and safe natural biopolymer-derived materials are highly desired for the purification of pollutants, but significantly improving their performance without the introduction of additional harmful chemicals remains a huge challenge. Based on the concept of “structure optimization design”, environment-friendly composite beads (named SA/PASP/RE) with excellent adsorption performance and recyclability were rationally constructed through a green ionic crosslinking route, using the completely green biopolymer sodium alginate (SA), sodium salt of polyaspartic acid (PASP), and the natural nanoclay rectorite (RE) as starting materials. The nano-layered RE was embedded in the polymer matrix to prevent the polymer chain from becoming over-entangled so that more adsorption sites inside the polymer network were exposed, which effectively improved the mass transfer efficiency of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotographic and Visual Arts · Cinema History and Criticism · Historical and Modern Theater Studies
