4.8 Article

β-Cyclodextrin Polymerized in Cross-Flowing Channels of Biomass Sawdust for Rapid and Highly Efficient Pharmaceutical Pollutants Removal from Water

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 29, Pages 32817-32826

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c08729

Keywords

biomass sawdust; cross flow filtration; beta-cyclodextrin polymer functionalization; removal of pharmaceutical pollutants; environmental remediation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21876072, 21707059]
  2. Talent Innovation and Entrepreneurship Project of Lanzhou [2018-RC-04]

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Water pollution arising from pharmaceuticals has raised great concerns about the potential risks for biosphere and human health. However, rapid and efficient removal of pharmaceutical contaminants from water remains challenging. Wood sawdust, a byproduct of the wood-processing industry, is an abundant, cost-effective, and sustainable material with a unique hierarchically porous microstructure. These features make wood sawdust quite interesting as a filtration material. Here, we report a novel cross-flow filtration composite based on beta-cyclodextrin-polymer-functionalized wood sawdust (beta-CD/WS) in which the pharmaceutical contaminant water flows through the sawn-off vessel channels and the micropores on the surface of the cell walls, generating the turbulence. Such water flow characteristics ensure full contact between pharmaceutical pollutants and beta-CD grafted on the cellulose backbone of wood sawdust, thereby enhancing the water treatment efficiency. Consequently, the beta-CD/WS filter device shows a high removal efficiency of over 97.5% within 90 s for various pharmaceutical contaminants including propranolol, amitriptyline, chlortetracycline, diclofenac, and levofloxacin, and a high saturation uptake capacity of 170, 156, 257, 159, and 185 mg g(-1), respectively. The high-performance wood-sawdust-based cross-flow filtration opens new avenues for solving the global water pollution issues, especially those caused by pharmaceutical contaminants.

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