4.8 Review

Graphene-Based Sorbents for Multipollutants Removal in Water: A Review of Recent Progress

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202007356

Keywords

adsorbent; dyes; graphene; heavy metals; oils; water purification

Funding

  1. ARC Research Hub for Graphene Enabled Industry Transformation [IH150100003]

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This review establishes the structure-function-performance relationship between graphene-based sorbents and multiple water pollutants, uncovers the correlation between adsorption properties of sorbents and pollutant removal efficiency, and elaborates on the rational design of advanced multipollutant sorbents based on graphene. Finally, it presents the reality, challenges, and opportunities of using advanced graphene materials as emerging sorbents for sustainable water purification technology.
The coexistence of multiple toxic water pollutants (heavy metals, organic dyes, oils, and organic solvents) limits the sustainable supply of clean water worldwide and urges the development of advanced water purification technology that can remove these contaminants simultaneously. Since its discovery, graphene-based materials have gained substantial attention toward development of new-generation sorbents for water purification. Despite several recently published reviews on water purification technology using graphene and its derivatives, there is still a gap in the review considering multiple water-pollutant remediation using advanced graphene materials. In this review, in the first instance, a comparative structure-function-performance relationship between graphene-based sorbents and the multipollutants in water is established. A fundamental correlation is made between the sorption performance for diverse pollutants in water with the more specific adsorption properties (surface area, pore size, type of functional groups, C/O, C/N, and C/S atomic ratio) of advanced graphene sorbents. Second, the underlying interaction mechanisms are uncovered between different classes of water pollutants using single graphene-based sorbents. Third, the rational design of advanced multipollutant sorbents based on graphene is elaborated. The reality, challenges, and opportunities of advanced graphene materials as emerging sorbents for sustainable water purification technology are finally presented in the last section.

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