The attention to polymer-based biomaterials, for instance, chitosan and its derivatives, as well as the techniques for using them in numerous scientific domains, is continuously rising. Chitosan is a decomposable naturally occurring polymeric material that is mostly obtained from seafood waste. Because of its special ecofriendly, biocompatible, non- toxic nature as well as antimicrobial properties, chitosan-based materials have received a lot of interest in the field of biomedical applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKeratin has become a promising adsorbing material for the removal of heavy metals from polluted water due to its environmentally benign nature, unique chemical structure, and binding ability. We developed keratin biopolymers (KBP-I, KBP-IV, KBP-V) using chicken feathers, and assessed their adsorption performance against metal-containing synthetic wastewater at varying temperatures, contact times, and pH. Initially, a multi-metal synthetic wastewater (MMSW) containing cations (Cd, Co, Ni) and oxyanions (Cr, As, V) was incubated with each KBP under different sets of conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe selective catalytic reduction (SCR) characteristics of NO and NO(2) over V(2)O(5)-WO(3)-MnO(2)/TiO(2) catalyst using ammonia as a reducing agent have been determined in a fixed-bed reactor at 200-400 degrees C. The presence of NO(2) enhances the SCR activity at lower temperatures and the optimum ratio of NO(2)/NO(x) is found to be 0.5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe oxidation characteristics of NO over Pt/TiO2 (anatase, rutile) catalysts have been determined in a fixed bed reactor as a function of O2, CO and SO2 concentrations in the presence of 8% water. The conversion of NO to NO2 increases with increasing O2 concentration up to 12% and it levels off. This saturation effect is more pronounced over rutile-Pt/TiO2 (r-Pt/TiO2) than that of anatase-Pt/TiO2 (a-Pt/TiO2).
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