Antibiotics Removal from Aqueous Environments: A Mini Review on Graphene Oxide-based Nanomaterials Application

  • Mohd Faizul Idham
    Water and Environmental Engineering Laboratory, Interdisciplinary Graduate School of Engineering Sciences, Kyushu University School of Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, Universiti Teknologi MARA
  • Falyouna Omar
    Water and Environmental Engineering Laboratory, Interdisciplinary Graduate School of Engineering Sciences, Kyushu University
  • Eljamal Ramadan
    Research Center for Negative Emission Technologies, International Science Innovation Center, Kyushu University
  • Maamoun Ibrahim
    Advanced Science Research Center, Japan Atomic Energy Agency
  • Eljamal Osama
    Water and Environmental Engineering Laboratory, Interdisciplinary Graduate School of Engineering Sciences, Kyushu University

Description

Antibiotics are pharmaceutical emerging contaminants (ECs) that contaminate the environment and jeopardize public health. More dangerously, the widespread consumption of antibiotics and their impact on water contamination foster the formation and evolution of antibiotic-resistant genes in microbes. Graphene Oxide (GO) is an emerging carbon material with a great potential to operate as an adsorbent to remove antibiotics from water due to its unique physical and chemical properties. Thus, this study briefly reviews topics related to antibiotic removal from water using GO-based materials. This research also summarizes the benefits of GO structural properties, adsorption mechanisms, and the affinity of the GO synthesis method to the quality of the GO produced.

Journal

Details 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1390575882595166464
  • DOI
    10.5109/5909114
  • HANDLE
    2324/5909114
  • ISSN
    24341436
  • Text Lang
    en
  • Article Type
    conference paper
  • Data Source
    • JaLC
    • IRDB
    • Crossref
    • OpenAIRE
  • Abstract License Flag
    Allowed

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