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Efficient removal of antibiotics from water by highly crosslinked metal-alginate particles: Preparation, isotherms, kinetics, and microbiological assay

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posted on 2025-06-27, 13:49 authored by Nicole Azizeh, Ayman Karam, Akash Heer, Mohammad Najlah, Richard Singer, Raid G Alany, Simon W Gould, Mouhamad Khoder

Traces of antibiotics reaching aquatic environment lead to the emergence of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The efficient removal of antibiotics (ATBs) traces from wastewater is essential to tackle the AMR. In this study, a novel solid-state crosslinking method of alginate (ALG) was developed and applied to specifically remove ATBs from water. A wide range of crosslinkers (Ca2+, Zn2+, Cu2+, Ni2+, Fe3+ and Al3+) was used and the crosslinking nature, density, and distribution were evidenced by FTIR, ICP-MS, and SEM-EDS. Compared with ionotropic gelation, the novel solid-state crosslinking method proved superior in term of ease of production, high crosslinking degree, and ATBs removal capacity. Fe-ALG and Zn-ALG showed high removal capacity of ciprofloxacin (356.5 mg/g and 928.6 mg/g) and doxycycline (90 mg/g and 690 mg/g), however, they were less effective toward amoxicillin (11.5 mg/g and 6 mg/g). Removal isotherms and kinetics followed type I and pseudo-second order suggesting a chemisorption removal mechanism. Fe-ALG was successfully regenerated with no loss in ATB removal capacity. The microbiological assay showed significant reductions of antibacterial activities after ATBs removal from water. Overall, metal-ALG systems obtained by solid-state crosslinking are promising for ATBs removal from wastewater giving the ease of production, high efficiency, regenerability, and scalability potential.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

326

Page range

121604-121604

Publication title

Carbohydrate Polymers

ISSN

0144-8617

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Location

England

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Item sub-type

Journal Article

Media of output

Print-Electronic

Affiliated with

  • School of Allied Health Outputs