Recent Advances in Fly-Ash-Based Geopolymers: Potential on the Utilization for Sustainable Environmental Remediation.
Yusuf G AdewuyiPublished in: ACS omega (2021)
This Mini-Review provides the fundamentals and the state-of-the-art overview on geopolymers, novel inorganic polymeric materials (also known as alkali-bounded ceramics), synthesized from aluminosilicate sources and explores their current and potential sustainable environmental applications. It summarizes and examines concisely the recent scientific advances on geopolymers widely synthesized from abundantly available fly-ash-based aluminosilicate materials via alkaline activation at relatively low temperatures. Although geopolymerization is not a new concept and has offered valuable solutions to some environmental challenges as a low-cost and environmentally benign alternative to conventional energy-intensive Portland cement-based construction materials and has also been used as a barrier in immobilizing toxic and radioactive metals, the application of this technology to produce effective adsorptive materials for mitigation of liquid- and gas-phase contaminants is relatively recent. The valorization of the fly-ash waste in the sustainable and cost-effective development of geopolymeric adsorbents and catalysts for the treatment and control of environmental contaminants and energy production and storage could lead to many economic benefits due to the low cost and resource recycling of this globally abundant raw material. Perspectives on the synthesis and utilization of new geopolymer-based adsorbents for environmental and energy applications with insights into future research directions, prospects, and challenges for economic large-scale production are addressed.