Abstract
The widespread use of herbicides such as paraquat and glyphosate is a serious environmental and health concern due to their persistence, mobility, and toxicity in aquatic ecosystems. Composites of alginic acid (Alg) are prepared with carbonaceous materials such as graphene oxide (GO), carbon particles (CPs), porous carbon particles (PCPs), carbon black (CB), and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) were synthesized and evaluated as sorbents for the removal of cationic herbicide paraquat and the anionic herbicide glyphosate. The resulting Alg-based beads are environmentally safe because of the materials used during their preparation, such as a biopolymer, Alg, carbonaceous substances (GO, CPs, PCPs, and CB) as composite moieties, and Ca(II) ions as cross-linkers. The Alg–bead composite possessed strong swelling ability ranging from 1700% to 2500%, which led to swollen beads of spherical shape and an average diameter of 3 mm, each containing 20% of carbonaceous materials. Amongst all Alg-based beads prepared for paraquat and glyphosate removal from the aquatic environment, the highest adsorption capacity was attained for Alg–porous carbon particle (Alg-PCP) composites. The Alg-PCP beads were capable of adsorbing 85.7 ± 2.9 mg/g and 31.6 ± 2.2 mg/g from 50 mL of 250 ppm solutions of paraquat and glyphosate, respectively. In contrast, bare Alg beads adsorbed only 39.7 ± 1.8 mg/g and 12.9 ± 1.7 mg/g, respectively. A 250 mg Alg-PCP bead composite achieved a 91% removal of paraquat from a 50 mL solution containing 250 ppm of paraquat. These results show that Alg–PCP can be used to mitigate herbicide contamination in water, protecting aquatic ecosystems and addressing associated environmental and health risks.