Recent perspective of antibiotics remediation: A review of the principles, mechanisms, and chemistry controlling remediation from aqueous media

Antibiotic pollution is an ever-growing concern that affects the growth of plants and the well-being of animals and humans. Research on antibiotics remediation from aqueous media has grown over the years and previous reviews have highlighted recent advances in antibiotics remediation technologies, p...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2023-07, Vol.881, p.163469-163469, Article 163469
Hauptverfasser: Nkoh, Jackson Nkoh, Oderinde, Olayinka, Etafo, Nelson Oshogwue, Kifle, Ghebretensae Aron, Okeke, Emmanuel Sunday, Ejeromedoghene, Onome, Mgbechidinma, Chiamaka Linda, Oke, Emmanuel A., Raheem, Saheed Abiola, Bakare, Omonike Christianah, Ogunlaja, Olumuyiwa O., Sindiku, Omotayo, Oladeji, Olatunde Sunday
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antibiotic pollution is an ever-growing concern that affects the growth of plants and the well-being of animals and humans. Research on antibiotics remediation from aqueous media has grown over the years and previous reviews have highlighted recent advances in antibiotics remediation technologies, perspectives on antibiotics ecotoxicity, and the development of antibiotic-resistant genes. Nevertheless, the relationship between antibiotics solution chemistry, remediation technology, and the interactions between antibiotics and adsorbents at the molecular level is still elusive. Thus, this review summarizes recent literature on antibiotics remediation from aqueous media and the adsorption perspective. The review discusses the principles, mechanisms, and solution chemistry of antibiotics and how they affect remediation and the type of adsorbents used for antibiotic adsorption processes. The literature analysis revealed that: (i) Although antibiotics extraction and detection techniques have evolved from single-substrate-oriented to multi-substrates-oriented detection technologies, antibiotics pollution remains a great danger to the environment due to its trace level; (ii) Some of the most effective antibiotic remediation technologies are still at the laboratory scale. Thus, upscaling these technologies to field level will require funding, which brings in more constraints and doubts patterning to whether the technology will achieve the same performance as in the laboratory; and (iii) Adsorption technologies remain the most affordable for antibiotic remediation. However, the recent trends show more focus on developing high-end adsorbents which are expensive and sometimes less efficient compared to existing adsorbents. Thus, more research needs to focus on developing cheaper and less complex adsorbents from readily available raw materials. This review will be beneficial to stakeholders, researchers, and public health professionals for the efficient management of antibiotics for a refined decision. [Display omitted] •Antibiotics pollution has raised global environmental concerns.•Advanced technologies have been developed to detect, analyze and remediate antibiotics.•Advanced technologies combine two or more simpler processes to achieve better results.•The adsorption behavior of antibiotics differs on different surfaces.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.163469