Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1055786 Journal of Environmental Management 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Cysteine grafting on a polypropylene nonwoven geotextile.•Functionalization of geotextiles using an eco-friendly process.•Optimization of the cysteine grafting using an experimental design technique.•Evaluation of the functionalized geotextile efficiency for the removal of metals.•Promising results on Cu2+ and Pb2+ for the trapping tests with the grafted nonwoven.

Cysteine is an interesting biomolecule in the heavy metals trapping field, thanks to its amino, thiol and carboxylic groups. This amino acid is indeed present in some natural chelating agents: glutathione, phytochelatins and metallothioneins. However, cysteine has never been used in remediation processes. When immobilized on a polypropylene nonwoven (PP) geotextile, an innovative and eco-friendly material is obtained, with potential use in drainage and filtration of wastewaters and sediments. PP was first functionalized with acrylic acid using a low pressure cold plasma process to bring reactive carboxylic functions onto the surface (PP-g-AA). Cysteine was then covalently grafted on this modified PP. The cysteine grafting on PP-g-AA was optimized using response surface methodology, which allowed concluding that the best conditions of immersion without heating consist in: a solution containing 0.229 mol/L of cysteine for 28 h. The materials were characterized by Scanning Electron Microscopy, InfraRed Spectroscopy and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy: evidence of covalent cysteine grafting was given. Preliminary sorption tests at 20 °C and pH = 4.5 with artificially polluted solutions give promising results for divalent heavy metal ions: 95 mg Cu (II) (CuSO4 solution), 104 mg Cu (II) and 135 mg Pb(II) (with NO3− counter-ion) per gram of PP are trapped.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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