Marine carbohydrates of wastewater treatment

Adv Food Nutr Res. 2014:73:103-43. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-800268-1.00007-X.

Abstract

Our natural heritage (rivers, seas, and oceans) has been exploited, mistreated, and contaminated because of industrialization, globalization, population growth, urbanization with increased wealth, and more extravagant lifestyles. The scenario gets worse when the effluents or contaminants are discharged directly. So wastewater treatment is a very important and necessary in nowadays to purify wastewater before it enters a body of natural water, or it is applied to the land, or it is reused. Various methods are available for treating wastewater but with many disadvantages. Recently, numerous approaches have been studied for the development of cheaper and more effective technologies, both to decrease the amount of wastewater produced and to improve the quality of the treated effluent. Biosorption is an emerging technology, which uses natural materials as adsorbents for wastewater treatment. Low-cost adsorbents of polysaccharide-based materials obtained from marine, such as chitin, chitosan, alginate, agar, and carrageenan, are acting as rescue for wastewater treatment. This chapter reviews the treatment of wastewater up to the present time using marine polysaccharides and its derivatives. Special attention is paid to the advantages of the natural adsorbents, which are a wonderful gift for human survival.

Keywords: Chitosan; Marine polysaccharides; Natural adsorbents; Water pollution.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adsorption
  • Agar
  • Alginates
  • Animals
  • Aquatic Organisms / chemistry*
  • Carbohydrates*
  • Carrageenan
  • Chitin
  • Chitosan
  • Glucuronic Acid
  • Hexuronic Acids
  • Humans
  • Wastewater* / chemistry
  • Water Purification / methods*

Substances

  • Alginates
  • Carbohydrates
  • Hexuronic Acids
  • Waste Water
  • Chitin
  • Glucuronic Acid
  • Carrageenan
  • Agar
  • Chitosan