Hydrogel Beads of Amidoximated Starch and Chitosan as Efficient Sorbents for Inorganic and Organic Compounds.
Diana Felicia LoghinMelinda Maria BazarghideanuSilvia VasiliuStefania RacovitaMarius-Mihai ZahariaTudor VasiliuMarcela MihaiPublished in: Gels (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The synthesis of hydrogel beads involving natural polymers is, nowadays, a leading research area. Among natural polymers, starch and chitosan represent two biomolecules with proof of efficiency and low economic impact in various utilization fields. Therefore, herein, the features of hydrogel beads obtained from chitosan and three sorts of starch (potato, wheat and rise starches), grafted with acrylonitrile and then amidoximated, were deeply investigated for their use as sorbents for heavy metal ions and dyes. The hydrogel beads were prepared by ionotropic gelation/covalent cross-linking of chitosan and functionalized starches. The chemical structure of the hydrogel beads was analyzed by FT-IR spectroscopy; their morphology was revealed by optical and scanning electron microscopies, while the influence of the starch functionalization strategies on the crystallinity changes was evaluated by X-ray diffraction. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to reveal the influence of the grafting reactions and grafted structure on the starch conformation in solution and their interactions with chitosan. The sorption capacity of the hydrogel beads was tested in batch experiments, as a function of the beads' features (synthesis protocol, starch sort) and simulated polluted water, which included heavy metal ions (Cu 2+ , Co 2+ , Ni 2+ and Zn 2+ ) and small organic molecules (Direct Blue 15 and Congo red).
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- hyaluronic acid
- wound healing
- heavy metals
- molecular dynamics simulations
- high resolution
- water soluble
- lactic acid
- quantum dots
- risk assessment
- health risk assessment
- electron microscopy
- randomized controlled trial
- health risk
- aqueous solution
- magnetic resonance imaging
- molecular docking
- sewage sludge
- magnetic resonance
- single molecule
- high speed
- metal organic framework
- solid phase extraction