2022
DOI: 10.1021/acsapm.2c00837
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Highly Persistent Lignocellulosic Fibers for Effective Cationic Dye Pollutant Removal

Abstract: Due to concerns about environmental pollution and the depletion of fossil resources, research on the utilization of woody biomass, such as lignin and cellulose, has consistently increased. This study examined the possibility of lignin as an adsorption material for water restoration and the dye removal behavior. For fiber wet spinning with continuous preparation of lignin-based adsorbents, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) was chosen as the additive polymer. To enhance the water stability of the lignin/PVA fibers, a natu… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…It has been known that lignin has excellent adsorption capacity for various harmful substances because it has an aromatic backbone capable of π-π bonding, aliphatic functional groups capable of hydrogen bonding, and oxygen-containing functional groups including phenolic hydroxyl groups (Ma et al, 2020). Kim et al (2022) developed a lignin-based fibrous adsorbent for removing ionic dyes and confirmed that lignin exhibited excellent adsorption capacity for cationic dyes. However, because lignin mainly has anionic functional groups, such as carboxyl and hydroxyl groups, on its surface, it has a poor adsorption capacity for contaminants with negative charges, such as anionic dyes, chromium, and palladium compounds.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…It has been known that lignin has excellent adsorption capacity for various harmful substances because it has an aromatic backbone capable of π-π bonding, aliphatic functional groups capable of hydrogen bonding, and oxygen-containing functional groups including phenolic hydroxyl groups (Ma et al, 2020). Kim et al (2022) developed a lignin-based fibrous adsorbent for removing ionic dyes and confirmed that lignin exhibited excellent adsorption capacity for cationic dyes. However, because lignin mainly has anionic functional groups, such as carboxyl and hydroxyl groups, on its surface, it has a poor adsorption capacity for contaminants with negative charges, such as anionic dyes, chromium, and palladium compounds.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 95%