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05 сакавіка 2026, 12:37
Chinese scientists find a way to effectively remove plastic contaminants in water
Photo: TDC / iStock
WUHAN, 5 March (BelTA - China Daily) - Small plastic particles
in water have become one of the most concerning consumer pollutants due
to their pervasive presence in water sources. A Chinese team has
developed a new strategy to remove those microplastics that adversely
affect health.
The study published on Saturday in the journal
Science Advances described a new reusable and biodegradable foam that
can absorb microplastics in water with an efficiency of up to 99.8
percent in its first use.
The researchers from Wuhan University
and Huazhong University of Science and Technology employed a sustainable
fibrous foam made of chitin from squid bone and cellulose from cotton.
The
foam has a porous structure that can attract and interact with diverse
microplastics commonly found in electronics, food packaging, textiles,
and other industrial products.
The team evaluated the foam's
performance using samples from four real-world water sources --
irrigation water, lake water, seawater and pond water - to see if the
foam would work in water found in a natural setting.
The foam
absorbed nearly 100 percent of microplastics in its first cycles in
samples, and the removal rates of this biopolymer-based material
exceeded 95 percent after five cycles, demonstrating its good
reusability.
According to the study, the material's adsorptive
capacity remains basically unaffected by inorganic particles, heavy
metals, organic pollutants, and microorganisms in water.
"Microplastics
entering terrestrial and aquatic habitats will continuously increase
for thousands of years due to the alarming volumes of plastic waste in
the environment," said Deng Hongbing from Wuhan University, the study's
corresponding author.
The study suggests that biomass materials
could be a cost-effective solution for tackling the intricate problem of
microplastic contamination in water, said Deng.
The team has
already applied for a patent for this technology, hoping to bring it
into real-world water treatment or home water purifiers in the near
future.