Iron oxide nanoparticles/nanocomposites derived from steel and iron wastes for water treatment: A review.

J Environ Manage

Integrated Circuits Laboratory, School of Engineering, Institute of Microengineering, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Neuchâtel, Switzerland.

Published: October 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) possess excellent magnetic properties and high surface area, making them effective for removing pollutants from water through adsorption and photocatalysis, but their traditional production methods are costly and harmful to the environment.
  • Industrial steel and iron waste can be repurposed to create IONPs, leveraging their high iron content, which not only reduces waste but also produces nanoparticles with comparable or superior properties compared to those made from commercial chemicals.
  • The steel waste-derived IONPs show high effectiveness in removing heavy metals and dyes from water and can be enhanced through functionalization; however, further research is needed on their use for emerging contaminants, economic feasibility in treatment plants, and potential toxicity.

Article Abstract

Iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) are characterized by superior magnetic properties, high surface area to volume ratio, and active surface functional groups. These properties aid in removal of pollutants from water, through adsorption and/or photocatalysis, justifying the choice of IONPs in water treatment systems. IONPs are usually developed from commercial chemicals of ferric and ferrous salts alongside other reagents, a procedure that is costly, environmentally unfriendly and limits their mass production. On the other hand, steel and iron industries produce both solid and liquid wastes which in most cases are piled, discharged into water streams or landfilled as strategies to dispose them off. Such practices are detrimental to environmental ecosystems. Given the high content of iron present in these wastes, they can be used to generate IONPs. This work reviewed published literature through selected key words on the deployment of steel and/or iron-based wastes as IONPs precursors for water treatment. The findings reveal that steel waste-derived IONPs have properties such as specific surface area, particle sizes, saturation magnetization, and surface functional groups that are comparable or sometimes better than those synthesized from commercial salts. Furthermore, the steel waste-derived IONPs have high removal efficacy for heavy metals and dyes from water with possibilities of being regenerated. The performance of steel waste-derived IONPs can be enhanced by functionalization with different reagents such as chitosan, graphene, and biomass based activated carbons. Nonetheless, there is need to explore the potential of steel waste-based IONPs in removing contaminants of emerging concern, modifying pollutant detection sensors, their techno-economic feasibility in large treatment plants, toxicity of these nanoparticles when ingested into the human body, among other areas.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.118236DOI Listing

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