Adsorption of sulfamethoxazole in an aqueous environment onto a novel magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate

Antibiotics are emerging environmental contaminants posing critical health risks due to their tendency to concentrate in living things and eventually infiltrate the human body. Sulfamethoxazole (SMZ) is among the commonly detected antibiotics in wastewater requiring effective removal approach. A sus...

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Published in:INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
Main Authors: Saheed, Ismaila Olalekan; Ying, Lee Ruo; Yaacob, Syed Fariq Fathullah Syed; Hanafiah, Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat; Latip, Ahmad Faiz Abdul; Suah, Faiz Bukhari Mohd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ELSEVIER 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001417134400001
author Saheed
Ismaila Olalekan; Ying
Lee Ruo; Yaacob
Syed Fariq Fathullah Syed; Hanafiah
Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat; Latip
Ahmad Faiz Abdul; Suah
Faiz Bukhari Mohd
spellingShingle Saheed
Ismaila Olalekan; Ying
Lee Ruo; Yaacob
Syed Fariq Fathullah Syed; Hanafiah
Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat; Latip
Ahmad Faiz Abdul; Suah
Faiz Bukhari Mohd
Adsorption of sulfamethoxazole in an aqueous environment onto a novel magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Chemistry; Polymer Science
author_facet Saheed
Ismaila Olalekan; Ying
Lee Ruo; Yaacob
Syed Fariq Fathullah Syed; Hanafiah
Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat; Latip
Ahmad Faiz Abdul; Suah
Faiz Bukhari Mohd
author_sort Saheed
spelling Saheed, Ismaila Olalekan; Ying, Lee Ruo; Yaacob, Syed Fariq Fathullah Syed; Hanafiah, Megat Ahmad Kamal Megat; Latip, Ahmad Faiz Abdul; Suah, Faiz Bukhari Mohd
Adsorption of sulfamethoxazole in an aqueous environment onto a novel magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
English
Article
Antibiotics are emerging environmental contaminants posing critical health risks due to their tendency to concentrate in living things and eventually infiltrate the human body. Sulfamethoxazole (SMZ) is among the commonly detected antibiotics in wastewater requiring effective removal approach. A sustainable, thermally stable and easily separable magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate (Msp-CTA) was developed via a simple step synthesis for eliminating SMZ from aqueous solution. The assessment of Msp-CTA characteristics via instrumentations revealed a mesoporous adsorbent having COO-,-OH, C--O, and Fe- O as its potential adsorption binding sites. Improved stability gained from blending sporopollenin (Sp) and cellulose triacetate (CTA) was affirmed through TGA analysis. Minimal competition for the adsorption sites by H+ and OH- favours efficient SMZ adsorption onto Msp-CTA at pH 3 and 5 with %removal of 78.7 and 83.1 %, respectively, using 40 mg/L initial SMZ concentration. The monolayer adsorption capacities 15.14 and 15.52 mg/g were obtained from nonlinear and linear Langmuir isotherms, respectively. The adsorption process is best described by Temkin > Hill > Langmuir > Freundlich isotherms based on proximity of correlation coefficient R2 to 1. The best fit to Temkin suggests that SMZ adsorption's energy decreases proportionally with increasing surface coverage of Msp-CTA. The adsorption process is arbitrated to conform best to pseudo-second order (PSO) kinetic, though a bias is perceived in the linear fitting. Msp-CTA shows reusable potential with 65.9 % desorption at third cycle. The thermodynamic studies revealed an endothermic process. Hence, Msp-CTA demonstrates potential as an alternative adsorbent for sulfonamide-based antibiotics' removal from wastewater.
ELSEVIER
0141-8130
1879-0003
2025
296

10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2025.139787
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Chemistry; Polymer Science

WOS:001417134400001
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001417134400001
title Adsorption of sulfamethoxazole in an aqueous environment onto a novel magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate
title_short Adsorption of sulfamethoxazole in an aqueous environment onto a novel magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate
title_full Adsorption of sulfamethoxazole in an aqueous environment onto a novel magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate
title_fullStr Adsorption of sulfamethoxazole in an aqueous environment onto a novel magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate
title_full_unstemmed Adsorption of sulfamethoxazole in an aqueous environment onto a novel magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate
title_sort Adsorption of sulfamethoxazole in an aqueous environment onto a novel magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate
container_title INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
language English
format Article
description Antibiotics are emerging environmental contaminants posing critical health risks due to their tendency to concentrate in living things and eventually infiltrate the human body. Sulfamethoxazole (SMZ) is among the commonly detected antibiotics in wastewater requiring effective removal approach. A sustainable, thermally stable and easily separable magnetic sporopollenin-cellulose triacetate (Msp-CTA) was developed via a simple step synthesis for eliminating SMZ from aqueous solution. The assessment of Msp-CTA characteristics via instrumentations revealed a mesoporous adsorbent having COO-,-OH, C--O, and Fe- O as its potential adsorption binding sites. Improved stability gained from blending sporopollenin (Sp) and cellulose triacetate (CTA) was affirmed through TGA analysis. Minimal competition for the adsorption sites by H+ and OH- favours efficient SMZ adsorption onto Msp-CTA at pH 3 and 5 with %removal of 78.7 and 83.1 %, respectively, using 40 mg/L initial SMZ concentration. The monolayer adsorption capacities 15.14 and 15.52 mg/g were obtained from nonlinear and linear Langmuir isotherms, respectively. The adsorption process is best described by Temkin > Hill > Langmuir > Freundlich isotherms based on proximity of correlation coefficient R2 to 1. The best fit to Temkin suggests that SMZ adsorption's energy decreases proportionally with increasing surface coverage of Msp-CTA. The adsorption process is arbitrated to conform best to pseudo-second order (PSO) kinetic, though a bias is perceived in the linear fitting. Msp-CTA shows reusable potential with 65.9 % desorption at third cycle. The thermodynamic studies revealed an endothermic process. Hence, Msp-CTA demonstrates potential as an alternative adsorbent for sulfonamide-based antibiotics' removal from wastewater.
publisher ELSEVIER
issn 0141-8130
1879-0003
publishDate 2025
container_volume 296
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2025.139787
topic Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Chemistry; Polymer Science
topic_facet Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Chemistry; Polymer Science
accesstype
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url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001417134400001
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