Bernd G. K.
Steiger
and
Lee D.
Wilson
*
Department of Chemistry, University of Saskatchewan, 110 Science Place, Saskatoon, S7N 5C9, Canada. E-mail: lee.wilson@usask.ca
First published on 28th July 2023
In this study, a granular composite comprised of 50% oat hulls (Oh), 10% kaolinite (K), and 40% modified chitosan (Chi) was crosslinked with epichlorohydrin (ECH) and subsequently functionalized with pyridinium. The modified Chi was obtained through synthetic conversion of a furfural-moiety attached via the amine-groups of chitosan (Oh50–Furfural). For comparison, non-modified pellets (Oh50), NaOH-neutralised pellets (Oh50–NaOH) and ECH crosslinked composites (Oh50–ECH) were used to elucidate the effect of variable synthetic modification. An analysis of the 13C solids NMR spectral results for the Oh50–Furfural composite revealed the presence of a product mixture, both chitosan with imine-linked furfuryl- and pyridinium moieties. Experimental support by infrared spectroscopy and thermogravimetric analysis corroborate the modified structure of Chi. Although the absolute orthophosphate adsorption capacity was low (5 mg g−1 at pH 4.75 and 1 mg g−1 at pH 8.5), the furfuryl-pyridinium modified adsorbent showed pH independent adsorption, which is in contrast to non-modified chitosan-based composites that often require acidic media. This study demonstrates that composites containing agro-waste and chitosan can be synthetically modified to incorporate pyridinium-moieties (alongside furfuryl-moieties) to enhance the adsorption properties towards orthophosphate, especially at low concentrations and neutral or slightly alkaline pH.
Sustainability spotlightAgricultural effluents and wastewaters with orthophosphate (Pi) present a global challenge due to eutrophication. Remediation of low Pi concentrations (ca. 5 mg L−1) still present challenges, especially at environmentally relevant pH conditions. This research uses a sustainable synthetic pathway to modify chitosan with suitable properties as an additive within granular biomass composites. The unique properties of the prepared composites over other conventional chitosan-based adsorbents are revealed in this research. The facile and sustainable approach described herein is suitable for scale-up and implementation in current water treatment technologies for the sustainable treatment of orthophosphate laden waters. Our work emphasizes the importance of the following UN sustainable development goals: water and sanitation (SDG 6); industry, innovation and infrastructure (SDG 9). |
Chitosan is a versatile biopolymer platform that has seen continued research interest for water treatment applications.10,11 Chitosan is a polysaccharide derived from chitin,12 which is comprised of the N-acetylglucosamine monomer unit. By comparison, chitosan is obtained from chitin via deacetylation, where a minimum of ca. 50% of the monomer units are converted to glucosamine units. The presence of abundant amine groups of chitosan enable facile chemical modification via Schiff base adducts with aldehydes, in contrast with more demanding synthetic conditions required for modification of cellulose. Research efforts directed at dye removal with low-cost and renewable adsorbents is a key topic of continued interest, where bio-sorbents are positioned to offer sustainable and cost-effective water treatment.13 In particular, the utilization of biomass waste materials for adsorbent preparation has garnered significant research interest to benefit local economies and facilitate an emerging global circular economy.14–18 The valorization of agro-waste as adsorbent materials by employing biomass such as oat hulls and wheat straw waste for the removal of lead ions and methylene blue highlight the utility of such materials.19,20 The compositing of a chitosan with agro-waste can yield a high-value product with lower input chemical costs, and enhanced adsorption properties with greater access to the active sites, according to synergistic effects reported for such materials.21,22
Biomass composites derived from spent coffee grounds or torrefied wheat straw have favourable stability in aqueous media, especially under acidic conditions versus non-torrefied biomass such as oat hulls.20,23 As well, composites with greater oat hull content, especially above 40–60% display limited mechanical stability, as evidenced by crumbling in the dry state. Hardness of such composites in the dry state was measured around 20–30 N for non-crosslinked and ca. 60 N for crosslinked composites. Furthermore, these composites show susceptibility to breakdown in aqueous media with low salinity or slight acidity as outlined in previous research.19,23 In turn, surface modification is required to reach acceptable mechanical strength and continued resilience in aqueous media for remediation applications in dynamic environments. For the case of aqueous media in many river systems, pH conditions reside near 7–8, where anion adsorption by chitosan can become attenuated or negligible.24,25
While chemical crosslinking addresses the aforementioned low mechanical strength and improves hydrostatic resilience, this introduces lower active site accessibility for adsorption and restricts expansion of the polymer network. Therefore reducing the adsorption capacity of the crosslinked composites. To also address the pH limitations of chitosan above pH 7, the surface of such crosslinked agro-waste pellets can be modified via cation incorporation to improve the adsorption properties.
An alternative strategy of introducing permanent cation species onto the chitosan backbone through quaternisation of the amine groups offers a unique alternative for conversion into pyridinium cations through furfural, which obviates the use of methyl iodide or other toxic reagents such as N-2,4-dinitrobenzene pyridinium chloride. Furfural can be derived from a variety of sugars through thermal dehydration, which presents a sustainable precursor that can be obtained without any fossil resources via a biorefinery approach.26–33 Thus, the synthetic modification of the amine groups from chitosan to generate a permanent cation within the composite structure aims to improve the adsorption properties versus composites that contain unmodified chitosan.34 The modification of chitosan was adapted from the synthesis of ionic liquids with furfural (cf.Scheme 1) as a proposed synthetic pathway.31
Scheme 1 Imine formation through reaction of chitosan with furfural and proposed subsequent acid catalysed ring-opening reaction with pyridinium formation (counterions omitted, potentially formate or acetate from the composite).35 R is an alkyl group, which represent the C2 site of the glucosamine monomer unit of chitosan, as denoted in Fig. 2. |
The pyridinium ion and formate/acetate as counterions are modelled after ion exchange resins that will afford their use in chitosan-based composites that contain oat hulls, which is a renewable and under-utilized biomass resource. This study outlines a proof-of-concept that such modifications are possible, which will catalyse further research for a more sustainable synthetic route for modified biopolymer adsorbent systems via green and sustainable methods.
Fig. 1 Prepared composites from left to right: Oh50 (no NaOH), Oh50–NaOH, Oh50–ECH, and Oh50–Furfural. |
(1) |
To calculate the equilibrium adsorption capacity, the Sips isotherm model was used according to eqn (2):36–38
(2) |
The composite formed from oat hulls and chitosan without any NaOH-washing step shows the characteristic carbohydrate fraction between 120–50 ppm, which overlaps with the chitosan carbohydrate pattern. The –CH3 of the acetyl group for chitosan is observed near 25 ppm. Another signal at 175 ppm, also relates to the carbonyl signature of chitosan, due to the acetyl-moiety, where ca. 82% of the biopolymer is deacetylated. Additionally, some remaining lignins and other aromatic constituents are noted between 160–120 ppm in Oh50 and also for Oh50–ECH to a lesser extent. However, these components are mostly removed during the NaOH-washing steps (Oh50–NaOH/Oh50–ECH). The increased peak intensity in Oh50–Furfural in this particular region is posited to originate from the incorporated furfuryl- and pyridinium-moieties. The remaining furfuryl-moieties were assigned to signatures near 165–140 ppm and 120–110 ppm, while C9 (170 ppm, stemming for the deprotonated OH-group in the zwitterion form) and C6, C7, C10 in the 140–130 ppm, with C8 potentially overlapping near 120 ppm.31,35 The reaction proceeds in two distinct steps, with an imine-linkage formed between chitosan and furfural, while ring-opening and closure is organo-catalysed via HCOOH to form the pyridinium cation (cf.Scheme 1).
Fig. 3 TGA of all components (starting materials) as well as the four prepared composites with derivative weight loss (A) and weight loss profiles in % (B). |
Kaolinite as a starting material does not show any appreciable water content or decomposition events below 400 °C. The other starting materials and composites show evidence of water loss below 100 °C. Raw oat hulls have two thermal events with peak maxima at 291 °C and 336 °C, while chitosan shows a single major peak at 305 °C.20,40 The early thermal event for the oat hulls can be attributed to its high hemi-cellulose content, where it decomposes at elevated temperatures. Lignins may also decompose at temperatures near 350 °C. In the composite materials, the first event is shifted to 300 °C, whereas the second event is shifted to an elevated value near 340 °C, except Oh50–Furfural, which has a temperature shift to 355 °C. According to the lower derivative weight loss at ca. 330–355 °C, the cellulosic content was lower compared to raw oat hulls and the furfuryl-modified composites show an additional shift and decrease in the derivative weight loss, indicating an elevated content of aromatic components versus the other composites, albeit to a lesser degree. Interestingly, the absolute weight loss (cf.Fig. 2B) is lowest for the furfural-modified systems, whereas ECH-crosslinking alone did not enhance the thermal stability of the composites. The incorporation of aromatic moieties along furfuryl-groups that possess ionic groups account for the greater thermal stability up to 500 °C.
The IR bands of kaolinite can be observed for all composites, verifying its presence. IR band broadening occurs near 3500 cm−1 and 2880 cm−1 that signifies potential H-bonding through OH-groups (and amine groups) within the structure between Oh and Chi, as well as kaolinite.19,41 The characteristic N–H bend is observed at ca. 1663 cm−1 for all composites, while an additional sharp band at 1650 cm−1 appeared in the Oh50–Furfural system. This supports the presence of a CC functional group due to the furfuryl moieties.42 A sharp band around 1564 cm−1 may also indicate the presence of aromatic C–C stretching in Oh50–Furfural, originating from the pyridinium moieties.43 The band at 1502 cm−1 only appears for the Oh50–Furfural system, which was assigned to C–C stretching from the aromatic rings. All composites show further evidence of the C–O–C stretch from polysaccharides ca. 1150–1000 cm−1. Additionally, the alkane band (C–H) at 752 cm−1 is sharper in the Oh50–Furfural versus Oh50–ECH, revealing low crosslinker content. These small variations in characteristic bands further indicate that only a part of the available moieties (amine) are modified through furfural. It can be inferred that the pellet surface versus the core of composite undergoes effective modification.
As expected, the unmodified chitosan pellets that contain fully protonated amine groups, where acetate as the counterion revealed the highest adsorption capacity (cf.Table 1 for the adsorption capacity at pH 4.75 and pH 8.5).
pH 4.75 | pH 8.5 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Q e (mg g−1) | n S | R 2 | Q e (mg g−1) | n S | R 2 | |
Oh50 | 13.9 | 2.0 | 0.96 | 6.2 | 9.9 | 0.94 |
Oh50–NaOH | 6.1 | 3.2 | 0.96 | — | — | — |
Oh50–ECH | 4.1 | 12.0 | 0.88 | — | — | — |
Oh50–Furfural | 4.9 | 1.0 | 0.93 | 1.1 | 40.7 | 0.69 |
Chitosan pellets that were washed with NaOH showed slightly greater adsorption capacity at higher orthophosphate levels, most likely due to protonation. While a maximum adsorption capacity of ca. 14 mg g−1 at elevated concentrations could be reached with unmodified pellets, these concentrations are rarely environmentally relevant, where the orthophosphate concentrations generally do not exceed 2–5 mg L−1.44–47 Herein, the furfural-modified composites exhibit a steep rise at low orthophosphate concentrations comparable or exceeding that of unmodified pellets. Notably, the NaOH and ECH modified pellet systems did not display appreciable adsorption at all for such environmentally relevant conditions.
Only the unmodified and furfural-modified pellets showed an appreciable phosphate uptake, albeit reduced when compared to pH 4.75. Similar to orthophosphate adsorption at pH 8.5, the furfural-modified composites exhibit a steep rise and suddenly plateau at low orthophosphate concentrations, suggesting the beneficial effect of the synthetic modification, in contrast to sole modification of composites with crosslinking.
When comparing the adsorption of orthophosphate at both pH conditions, the adsorption capacity was roughly doubled at pH 4.75 for Oh50 and Oh50–Furfural. At pH 8.5, Oh50–NaOH and Oh50–ECH did not reveal appreciable adsorption, which only began to adsorb orthophosphate at pH 4.75 and concentrations above 75–100 mg L−1. It is therefore purported, that a positive surface charge was imbued onto chitosan at acidic pH. Therefore, electrostatic interactions between adsorbate and adsorbent govern the adsorption process.47,48 Priya et al. provided an overview of selected materials with their orthophosphate adsorption capacity (see Table 2) at variable conditions.48
Adsorbent materials | Q e (mg g−1) | Concentration range (mg L−1) | pH |
---|---|---|---|
Fe-zeolite-A49 | 18.75 | 4.725 | 5 |
Magnetic Fe-oxide50 | 10.85 | 2–20 | 2–6 |
Iron-modified biochar51 | 2–3 | 0–100 | 6–5 |
MIL-101(Al)-CS52 | 49.8 | 30 | 3–10 |
Chitosan–La beads53 | 107.7 | 50 | 4 |
SP-Zr–La54 | 23.5 | 30 | 3 |
Fe(OH)3@CNF55 | 142.86 | 10 | 4.5 |
Oh50–Furfural (this study) | 4.9/1.1 | 0–300 | 4.75/8.5 |
The maximum adsorption capacity is reached at even low concentrations for environmentally applicable concentrations. In contrast to typical chitosan-based adsorbents, the surface modification also afforded appreciable adsorption (ca. 1 mg g−1) onto the prepared pelletized composites at slightly alkaline conditions, obviating pH adjustment to meet optimal conditions.
The inherent benefit of the proposed valorization route is the sustainably sourced raw materials from sugars (furfural), chitosan and under-utilised oat hull agro-waste that otherwise shows limited applicability. This strategy offers accessible and affordable preparation of pelletized adsorbents, which are amenable as slow-release fertilizer carriers, in contrast with inorganic phosphate fertilizer. The high biomass content of the composites lend to their utility as amendment materials for addressing food and water security in agricultural applications.51,56,57
The adsorption capacity of Oh50–Furfural composite was estimated as 1.1 mg g−1 at pH 8.5 while Oh50–NaOH and Oh50–ECH did not reveal any notable orthophosphate uptake. At pH 4.75, the adsorption capacity was 4.9 mg g−1 for the Oh50–Furfural composite, which exceeds the uptake capacity of the crosslinked pellets for Oh50–ECH (4.1 mg g−1). Notably, the maximum adsorption capacity reaches a plateau at less than 50 mg L−1, with appreciable adsorption at environmentally relevant concentrations (up to 5 mg L−1). This study relies on sustainable and readily available agro-waste (oat hulls) and sustainably sourced organic precursors (i.e., furfural from sugars), which precludes the use of petrochemicals in the adsorbent design, further aligning with the UN SDG 12 for responsible consumption and production of chemical products in addition to other UN SDGs (goals-2, -6, & -12). Further research will explore alternatives to energy intensive synthesis that requires multi-day synthesis under reflux conditions to develop an alternate strategy that embodies principles of green chemistry. Furthermore, a crucial aspect for continued research is an improved conversion of the furfuryl-moieties into pyridinium-moieties for increased adsorption efficiency through exploring alternative synthetic approaches (e.g., microwave synthesis). Nevertheless, this study provides support for the proof-of-concept that chitosan within a physical blend along with ECH crosslinking can be functionalized with pyridinium cations that extends beyond previous starch-based composites.58 This type of modification reported herein results in improved adsorption properties through a green strategy using sustainably sourced precursors.
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