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Bionanomining: bioengineered CuO nanoparticles from mining and organic waste for photo-catalytic dye degradation.

Eleazar Gandara MartinezNora Elizondo VillarrealDora Martínez DelgadoFrancisco Paraguay DelgadoVictor M Castaño
Published in: Environmental geochemistry and health (2024)
The novel bioengineered CuO nanoparticles were successfully synthesized directly using green chemistry, the nontoxic and renewable aqueous extract of waste papaya peel (Carica papaya) as a precursor. The XRD analysis indicated a monoclinic phase of CuO nanoparticles and a size of 20 nm, and the optical absorption analysis showed a peak in the 264 nm range. In TEM, the morphology of the NPs was observed to be almost spherical with a particle size of 15 nm. The CuO nanoparticles showed good efficiency in the degradation of methylene, obtaining up to 50% in 40 min using 6 mg in 60 ml of MB at 10 mg/L. The novel presented in this work derives from using rock minerals, from which we have directly obtained copper salt and copper oxide nanoparticles. This process not only utilizes ecological green chemistry but also offers an economic advantage by directly producing nanoparticles from the mineral instead of purchasing costly pure chemical reagents and employing novel nanomaterials to purify wastewater.
Keyphrases
  • oxide nanoparticles
  • photodynamic therapy
  • walled carbon nanotubes
  • oxidative stress
  • wastewater treatment
  • sewage sludge
  • ionic liquid
  • light emitting
  • anaerobic digestion