Risk assessment and the adsorptive removal of some pesticides from synthetic wastewater: a review

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Abstract

Background: The need for environmental protection and remediation processes has been an increasing global concern. Pesticides are used as biological agents, disinfectants, antimicrobials, and also in a mixture of some chemical substances. Their modes of application are through selective dispensing and attenuation processes which act upon any pest that compete with the production, processing, and storage of foods and also in agricultural commodes. The pests might comprise weeds, insects, birds, fish, and microbes. Main body: Pesticides are commonly found in water surface, landfill leachate, ground water, and wastewater as pollutant. An overview of recently studied adsorption processes for the pesticide elimination from polluted water has been reported in this study utilizing activated carbon, clay materials, biomass materials, metal organic frame work, graphene, and carbon-based materials as well as agricultural wastes as adsorbents. The risk assessment and cost analysis of adsorbents were also provided. Conclusion: Evidences from literature recommend modified adsorbent and composite materials to have a prospective use in pesticide removal from wastewater. The adsorption data obtained fitted into different isotherm and kinetic models and also the thermodynamic aspect have been discussed. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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Garba, Z. N., Abdullahi, A. K., Haruna, A., & Gana, S. A. (2021, December 1). Risk assessment and the adsorptive removal of some pesticides from synthetic wastewater: a review. Beni-Suef University Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences. Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1186/s43088-021-00109-8

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