2024
DOI: 10.3390/su16020495
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Recent Advances in the Remediation of Textile-Dye-Containing Wastewater: Prioritizing Human Health and Sustainable Wastewater Treatment

Aravin Prince Periyasamy

Abstract: Water makes up most of the Earth, although just 0.3% is usable for people and animals. The huge oceans, icecaps, and other non-potable water resources make up the remaining 99.7%. Water quality has declined in recent decades due to pollution from population growth, industry, unplanned urbanization, and poor water management. The textile industry has significant global importance, although it also stands as a major contributor to wastewater generation, leading to water depletion and ecotoxicity. This issue aris… Show more

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Cited by 66 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Several agricultural and food waste materials have shown promise when used as adsorbents to remove contaminants. These materials include Azolla, banana peel, cabbage waste, chitosan, citrus peel, Citrus limonum leaves, corn cob, orange peel, peanut hull, rice husk, sawdust, and sugar cane bagasse [28]. Adsorbents of all kinds, including hydrogels, metal-organic frameworks, organic polymers, nanomaterials, and others, have been effectively developed for the remediation of wastewater containing dyes [29,30].…”
Section: Adsorption Of Dyesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several agricultural and food waste materials have shown promise when used as adsorbents to remove contaminants. These materials include Azolla, banana peel, cabbage waste, chitosan, citrus peel, Citrus limonum leaves, corn cob, orange peel, peanut hull, rice husk, sawdust, and sugar cane bagasse [28]. Adsorbents of all kinds, including hydrogels, metal-organic frameworks, organic polymers, nanomaterials, and others, have been effectively developed for the remediation of wastewater containing dyes [29,30].…”
Section: Adsorption Of Dyesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To address these issues and ensure long-term viability, it's necessary to integrate environmental, economic, and social considerations and develop a sustainable strategy. This requires meeting environmental requirements, as the industry consumes vast amounts of water and generates wastewater with high levels of pollutants, including unfixed dyes (Periyasamy, 2024). Worldwide, the manufacturing and coloring of fabrics release around 140,000 tonnes of toxic substances annually, most of which evade conventional wastewater treatments (Guezzen et al, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%