Carbon materials of different structural and textural properties (multi-walled carbon nanotubes, carbon cryogel, and carbonized hydrothermal carbon) were used as adsorbents for the removal of estrone, 17βestradiol, and 17α-ethinylestradiol from aqueous solutions. Chemical modi cation and/or activation were applied to alter surface characteristics and to increase the adsorption and desorption e ciency of carbon materials. Surfaces of treated and untreated carbon materials were characterized through the examination of the textural properties, the nature of surface functional groups, and surface acidity.Although speci c surface area and content of surface functional groups did not have a dominant in uence on the adsorption process, it was found that a high ratio of surface mesoporosity affected the adsorption process most prominently by increasing adsorption capacity and the rate of the adsorption process. High values of adsorption e ciency (88-100 %) and maximum adsorption capacities (29.45-194.7 mg/g) imply that examined materials, especially mesoporous carbon cryogel and multi-walled carbon nanotubes, can be used as powerful adsorbents for relatively fast removal of estrogen hormones from water.
Scientists discovered plastic in the early 1900s, but didn't realize the detrimental effects its fragmentation could have on the environment 100 years later. In particular, nanoplastics (NPs) particles ranging in size from 1 to 100 nm can cause major problems in the living world due to their high specific surface area for the adsorption other polluting substances from water, and their further bioaccumulation through the food chain. There is no distinctive method to identify, characterize, and quantify nanoplastics in aquatic environments. Although many of the methods developed to study microplastics are not directly applicable to nanoplastics, conventional methods of characterizing nanoplastics are usually tedious because they study individual nanoparticles in isolation. Since nanoplastics resulting from the decomposition of microplastics have different properties than engineering plastic nanoparticles, new techniques need to be developed to help us better understand the seriousness of the nanoplastic problem. Nanoplastic can be isolated from the water environment by a combination of filters and ultracentrifugation. A recent publications states that combining microscopy and spectroscopy, supported by chemometric techniques, will alow a better understand he behavior of nanoplastic particles in the environment and organisms. High hopes are placed on microscopies combined with neural networks for the quantification and characterization of nanoplastics in complex systems. This article describes the degradation pathways of plastics and the formation of nanoplastics in aquatic environments, and possible methods for separation and characterization of nanoplastics in relation to recent publications.
Carbon materials of different structural and textural properties (multi-walled carbon nanotubes, carbon cryogel, and carbonized hydrothermal carbon) were used as adsorbents for the removal of estrone, 17β-estradiol, and 17α-ethinylestradiol from aqueous solutions. Chemical modification and/or activation were applied to alter surface characteristics and to increase the adsorption and desorption efficiency of carbon materials. Surfaces of treated and untreated carbon materials were characterized through the examination of the textural properties, the nature of surface functional groups, and surface acidity. Although specific surface area and content of surface functional groups did not have a dominant influence on the adsorption process, it was found that a high ratio of surface mesoporosity affected the adsorption process most prominently by increasing adsorption capacity and the rate of the adsorption process. High values of adsorption efficiency (88–100 %) and maximum adsorption capacities (29.45–194.7 mg/g) imply that examined materials, especially mesoporous carbon cryogel and multi-walled carbon nanotubes, can be used as powerful adsorbents for relatively fast removal of estrogen hormones from water.
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