Oil spill cleanup using industrial and agricultural waste-based magnetic silica sorbent material: a green approach

Recent oil spills causing pollution in oceans and other bodies of water require sorbents that are both cost-effective and eco-friendly. Novel magnetic silica sorbent materials (MSS) have been synthesized using ash from rice husks or sugarcane bagasse and red dust, a waste generated in the steel indu...

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Autores principales: Narendra Kumar, Sudhir S. Amritphale, John C. Matthews, Joan G. Lynam
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Taylor & Francis Group 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/003caadec6e8433da86118a02ce1cf7b
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:003caadec6e8433da86118a02ce1cf7b2021-11-17T14:21:57ZOil spill cleanup using industrial and agricultural waste-based magnetic silica sorbent material: a green approach1751-82531751-719210.1080/17518253.2021.1993349https://doaj.org/article/003caadec6e8433da86118a02ce1cf7b2021-10-01T00:00:00Zhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17518253.2021.1993349https://doaj.org/toc/1751-8253https://doaj.org/toc/1751-7192Recent oil spills causing pollution in oceans and other bodies of water require sorbents that are both cost-effective and eco-friendly. Novel magnetic silica sorbent materials (MSS) have been synthesized using ash from rice husks or sugarcane bagasse and red dust, a waste generated in the steel industry. The designed MSS exhibited a definite response to external magnetic fields. The MSS, based on rice husk ash and bagasse ash, showed oil loading capacities of 1.93 and 2.09 times their weight, respectively, and also exhibited recyclability. The MSS were also functionalized to make them oleophilic and hydrophobic using sodium oleate. These functionalized rice husk ash and bagasse ash-based MSS showed oil loading capacities of 3.22 and 2.69 times their weight, respectively. Magnetic separation provided a convenient method for the removal of magnetizable particles by applying an appropriate external magnetic field. The MSS at the end of their utilization cycles were successfully incorporated into geopolymeric material, enabling the process to be zero waste and to achieve the overall goal of finding a green approach to use these wastes after oil spillage cleanup.Narendra KumarSudhir S. AmritphaleJohn C. MatthewsJoan G. LynamTaylor & Francis Grouparticlered dustrice husk silicaoil recoveryzero-wastesugarcane bagasse ashScienceQChemistryQD1-999ENGreen Chemistry Letters and Reviews, Vol 14, Iss 4, Pp 632-639 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic red dust
rice husk silica
oil recovery
zero-waste
sugarcane bagasse ash
Science
Q
Chemistry
QD1-999
spellingShingle red dust
rice husk silica
oil recovery
zero-waste
sugarcane bagasse ash
Science
Q
Chemistry
QD1-999
Narendra Kumar
Sudhir S. Amritphale
John C. Matthews
Joan G. Lynam
Oil spill cleanup using industrial and agricultural waste-based magnetic silica sorbent material: a green approach
description Recent oil spills causing pollution in oceans and other bodies of water require sorbents that are both cost-effective and eco-friendly. Novel magnetic silica sorbent materials (MSS) have been synthesized using ash from rice husks or sugarcane bagasse and red dust, a waste generated in the steel industry. The designed MSS exhibited a definite response to external magnetic fields. The MSS, based on rice husk ash and bagasse ash, showed oil loading capacities of 1.93 and 2.09 times their weight, respectively, and also exhibited recyclability. The MSS were also functionalized to make them oleophilic and hydrophobic using sodium oleate. These functionalized rice husk ash and bagasse ash-based MSS showed oil loading capacities of 3.22 and 2.69 times their weight, respectively. Magnetic separation provided a convenient method for the removal of magnetizable particles by applying an appropriate external magnetic field. The MSS at the end of their utilization cycles were successfully incorporated into geopolymeric material, enabling the process to be zero waste and to achieve the overall goal of finding a green approach to use these wastes after oil spillage cleanup.
format article
author Narendra Kumar
Sudhir S. Amritphale
John C. Matthews
Joan G. Lynam
author_facet Narendra Kumar
Sudhir S. Amritphale
John C. Matthews
Joan G. Lynam
author_sort Narendra Kumar
title Oil spill cleanup using industrial and agricultural waste-based magnetic silica sorbent material: a green approach
title_short Oil spill cleanup using industrial and agricultural waste-based magnetic silica sorbent material: a green approach
title_full Oil spill cleanup using industrial and agricultural waste-based magnetic silica sorbent material: a green approach
title_fullStr Oil spill cleanup using industrial and agricultural waste-based magnetic silica sorbent material: a green approach
title_full_unstemmed Oil spill cleanup using industrial and agricultural waste-based magnetic silica sorbent material: a green approach
title_sort oil spill cleanup using industrial and agricultural waste-based magnetic silica sorbent material: a green approach
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/003caadec6e8433da86118a02ce1cf7b
work_keys_str_mv AT narendrakumar oilspillcleanupusingindustrialandagriculturalwastebasedmagneticsilicasorbentmaterialagreenapproach
AT sudhirsamritphale oilspillcleanupusingindustrialandagriculturalwastebasedmagneticsilicasorbentmaterialagreenapproach
AT johncmatthews oilspillcleanupusingindustrialandagriculturalwastebasedmagneticsilicasorbentmaterialagreenapproach
AT joanglynam oilspillcleanupusingindustrialandagriculturalwastebasedmagneticsilicasorbentmaterialagreenapproach
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