Plant-Based Amyloids from Food Waste for Removal of Heavy Metals from Contaminated Water
Water pollution is one of the major global threats brought about by industrial, agricultural, and any other antropogenic activity. Heavy metals represent a large group of water pollutants that can accumulate in the human body, causing cancer and mutagenic diseases. Technologies currently used to treat polluted wastewaters of heavy metals employ chemical, ion-exchange, and membrane purification methods. However, these techniques are energy-intensive due to high pressure and power requirements for membrane-based technologies, or highly selective, as in ion-exchange resins, making drinking water less affordable in developing countries. In this study, plant amyloid-carbon membranes consisting of sunflower and peanut amyloid fibrils were fabricated through a green and sustainable process and used to remove toxic heavy metal pollutants to drinkable standards with negligible energy consumption. Protein-rich sunflower and peanut meals serve as low-cost raw materials, from which proteins were extracted, isolated, and self-assembled into functional amyloid fibrils for heavy metal removal. The process can be easily be upscaled due to its simplicity and minimal use of chemical reagents, pointing towards the future of low-cost yet efficient water treatment technologies
Year of publication: |
[2022]
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Authors: | Soon, Wei Long ; Peydayesh, Mohammad ; Mezzenga, Raffaele ; Miserez, Ali |
Publisher: |
[S.l.] : SSRN |
Subject: | Abfallvermeidung | Waste prevention | Lebensmittel | Food | Gewässerbelastung | Water pollution | Schwermetall | Heavy metal |
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