Macromol (May 2021)

Chitosan Adsorbent Derivatives for Pharmaceuticals Removal from Effluents: A Review

  • Efstathios V. Liakos,
  • Maria Lazaridou,
  • Georgia Michailidou,
  • Ioanna Koumentakou,
  • Dimitra A. Lambropoulou,
  • Dimitrios N. Bikiaris,
  • George Z. Kyzas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/macromol1020011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2
pp. 130 – 154

Abstract

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Chitin is mentioned as the second most abundant and important natural biopolymer in worldwide scale. The main sources for the extraction and exploitation of this natural polysaccharide polymer are crabs and shrimps. Chitosan (poly-β-(1 → 4)-2-amino-2-deoxy-d-glucose) is the most important derivative of chitin and can be used in a wide variety of applications including cosmetics, pharmaceutical and biomedical applications, food, etc., giving this substance high value-added applications. Moreover, chitosan has applications in adsorption because it contains amino and hydroxyl groups in its molecules, and can thus contribute to many possible adsorption interactions between chitosan and pollutants (pharmaceuticals/drugs, metals, phenols, pesticides, etc.). However, it must be noted that one of the most important techniques of decontamination is considered to be adsorption because it is simple, low-cost, and fast. This review emphasizes on recently published research papers (2013–2021) and briefly describes the chemical modifications of chitosan (grafting, cross-linking, etc.), for the adsorption of a variety of emerging contaminants from aqueous solutions, and characterization results. Finally, tables are depicted from selected chitosan synthetic routes and the pH effects are discussed, along with the best-fitting isotherm and kinetic models.

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