Carbon Nanotubes for a Green Environment
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Carbon Nanotubes for a Green Environment

Balancing the Risks and Rewards

Shrikaant Kulkarni, Iuliana Stoica, A. K. Haghi, Shrikaant Kulkarni, Iuliana Stoica, A. K. Haghi

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eBook - ePub

Carbon Nanotubes for a Green Environment

Balancing the Risks and Rewards

Shrikaant Kulkarni, Iuliana Stoica, A. K. Haghi, Shrikaant Kulkarni, Iuliana Stoica, A. K. Haghi

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Carbon Nanotubes for a Green Environment: Balancing the Risks and Rewards describes the synthesis, characterization, and unique applications of undoped and doped carbon nanotubes as well as hybrids of them with grapheme or nanocomposites, focusing on green aspects of carbon nanotube applications. The volume shows new approaches used for tapping the potential and promise of key materials in isolation or combined with other materials.

The research-oriented chapters highlight a spectrum of applications of carbon nanotubes as novel materials for energy storage as well as for environmental remediation, wastewater treatment, green health care products, and more. Chapters explore the use of carbon nanotubes for remediation methods for wastewater treatment such as by using graphene oxide-carbon nanotube composites and by applying undoped and doped carbon nanotubes for removing contaminates. The book also looks at the application of carbon nanotubes for enhanced oil recovery and for heavy metal separation. Other chapters look at the rheological behavior of carbon nanotubes-based materials and their role in processing for various products, the thermal and electrical transport in carbon nanotubes composites, carbon nanotubes-based composite materials for electromagnetic shielding applications. The biomedical applications of carbon nanotube-based nanomaterials also explored, such as FTIR spectroscopy.

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Informations

Année
2022
ISBN
9781000565683
Édition
1
Sous-sujet
Nanoscience

CHAPTER 1 CARBON NANOTUBES FOR CLEAN WATER

GURCHARN KAUR and JATINDER SINGH AULAKH*
Chemistry Department, Punjabi University Patiala, Patiala 147002, Punjab, India
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]

ABSTRACT

Nowadays, water treatment is a requirement to cover water shortage due to industrialization and urbanization. Owing to their unique physical, chemical, and structural properties, carbon nanotubes are playing a promising role in cleaning the wastewater. Carbon nanotubes provide potential solutions to environmental problems by using them as adsorbent, photocatalysts, and membranes. Adsorption is a technique where chemical interaction between the adsorbate and adsorbent play a considerable role to remove toxic contaminants from wastewaters. There are different ranges in diameters are available, such as 10–20, 20–40, and 40–60 nm for the degradation of contaminants in wastewaters. 10–20 nm diameter size showed unique results in the degradation of contaminants. Further, smooth hydrophobic walls, specially aligned atoms and the diameter of carbon nanotubes, advanced membrane technologies for water treatments are developed and are of two types as vertically aligned and mixed matrix carbon nanotube membranes. Mixed carbon nanotube membranes are preferred to use due to tremendous separation performance, high water flux, low biofouling potential in water treatments. Scientists are still searching in this field to find an efficient and cost-effective catalyst for wastewater treatments.

1.1 GENERAL INTRODUCTION

Nowadays, the water crisis is one of the greatest challenges. Contaminated water is a ubiquitous problem around the world. Demand for water is growing rapidly because of the rapid increase in population and urbanization. However, resources are limited in arid and densely populated areas. So, shortage of water resources in the world makes scientists aware to find efficient technologies for the treatment of contaminated water and desalination of seawater. This is not only the problem of water shortage, pollution is also a big issue of shortage of water. The level of water pollution has reached at peak and society is also concerning about the detrimental effects of pollution on the environment, aquatic, and aerial. Due to the increase in industrialization, urbanization, domestic and agricultural waste, and deforestation, water resources as lakes, rivers, aquifers, oceans and groundwater are vulnerable to pollution. Human activities are producing many harmful pollutants that are very toxic to living organisms.1 These pollutants can be divided into different types as organic (e.g., agricultural pesticides and herbicides, dyes, alcohols, carboxylic acid, aliphatic and aromatic compounds, and oils), inorganic (e.g., silver (Ag), lead (Pd), cadmium (Cd), nickel (Ni), arsenic (As), mercury (Hg) and salts), nutrients (e.g., ammonia (NH3), phosphate (PO43-), nitrite (NO2-) and nitrate (NO3- )), radioactive pollutants (e.g., iodine (131I), sulfur (35S), phosphorous (32P), calcium (45Ca), cobalt (60Co), and carbon (14C)) and pathogens (e.g., bacteria, fungi and viruses).2 Due to the increase in the world population, the water demand is increased by 64 billion cubic meters per annum.3,4 A report by United Nations (UN) depicted that almost 2 billion population in the world did not have clean water in 2018 and it would be nearly 1.8 billion by 2025.5,6 So, treatments of water to get clean water has become an interesting topic of the public and government. There is a need to use effective and cost-effective technologies to disinfect the water, especially in rural areas. Several conventional techniques are used as filtration, sedimentation, flocculation, coagulation, centrifugal separation to clean the water. Despite this,other methods as evaporation, distillation, crystallization, precipitation, solvent extraction, ion exchange, adsorption, reverse osmosis (RO), forward osmosis (FO), microfiltration (MF), ultrafiltration (UF), electrolysis, and electrodialysis are used to clean water.7 Among these, engineering expertise are required that is not cost-effective. From the above techniques, adsorption is considered as the best technique especially onto nanomaterials and this is a proficient technique to remove the heavy metals from the wastewater as compared with other methods that are not efficient in the treatment of water.8–10 Several adsorbents as chelating minerals,11,12 activated carbon,13 biopolymers,14,15 engineered nanomaterials16,18 and nanocomposites19–22 have been utilized for the removal of pollutants.
Nanomaterials have unique properties which are absent in bulk-sized materials. Nanomaterials are used due to their large surface area, small size, reactivity, and active aromaticity. The high surface area-to-volume ratio of the nanomaterial helps to increase the sorption efficiency which can be improved more by the surface modification through the use of functional groups on the surface of the material without the interaction with the bulk properties.23–26 The surface modified materials have been explored immensely and resulted in enhanced performances in wastewater treatments.27,28 Several nanomaterials like nanospheres,29,30 nanorods31,32 and nanotubes33,35 are used for the removal of distinct pollutants in the wastewater. Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have attracted enormous attention of the researchers and scientists since the first discovery in 1991 due to the unique physical, chemical, electrical, and structural properties of CNTs.36 CNTs are utilized in several technologies to mitigate water scarcity by cleaning water in the world. Various carbon nanotube nanotechnologies have immense water treatment to clean wate...

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