Abstract

BackgroundThe water supplies are hindered because aquatic resources have constrained with natural and man-made pollution activities in terms of releasing huge amounts of contaminants from different point and non-point sources across the globe. The industries like metal plating, batteries, paint, fertilizers, tanneries, textile industries, dyeing industries, mining operations, and paper industries discharge their effluents into the environment directly or indirectly, and hence, they are considered as the key sources of heavy metals contamination in water resources. Heavy metals are inorganic, non-biodegradable, persistent, and having a tendency to get accumulated in biotic and abiotic components of environment as compared to organic pollutants. Some heavy metal cations, for example, mercury, arsenic, cadmium, zinc, lead, nickel, copper, and chromium, are carcinogenic in nature and so, lethal. There are growing health concerns due to toxic impacts of heavy metals on every genre of ecosystem. To deal with the bottleneck situation, it is highly imperative to search a feasible solution for heavy metal remediation in water in context of preventing amalgamation of noxious contaminants in food web. Different methods are exercised for the remediation of such impurities from its solutions. One method, i.e. adsorption is found to be the simplest, economical, efficient, and eco-friendly in this context.Main bodyGeopolymers exhibit heterogeneous amorphous microstructure and wide surface area. The compatibility for depollution and the performance of these materials mainly depend upon their preparation methods, composition, and microstructure. Fly ash-based geopolymer may serve as a better alternate to various cost-effective adsorbents and it will be a proven environmentally viable, waste to money solution by consuming heaps of fly ash waste for the adsorbent modified by using fly ash. The possible utilization of wastes from several industries is a matter of concerned sustainability benefits. This study shows that fly ash-based geopolymers have the potential to cope up with the problems and risk factors associated with the fly ash waste management and it would be the utmost scientific panacea in the field of removing toxins from aqueous medium and maintain environmental health in the future.Short conclusionsThe literature available in different databases is very limited pertaining to heavy metal remediation using fly ash-based geopolymers. Keeping all the factors in mind, this article is an attempt to summarize relevant informations related to work done on fly ash-based geopolymers for treating aqueous solutions comprising heavy metals.

Highlights

  • Short conclusions: The literature available in different databases is very limited pertaining to heavy metal remediation using fly ash-based geopolymers

  • Keeping all the factors in mind, this article is an attempt to summarize relevant informations related to work done on fly ash-based geopolymers for treating aqueous solutions comprising heavy metals

  • Geopolymers exhibited its potential, compatibility and good performances in heavy metal remediation processes. Specific parameters such as amorphousness, surface area, surface texture, porosity, orientation, dispersion, durability, surface pH, chemistry involved in chemical modification, immobilization of pollutants, cost efficiency, eco-friendly preparations and treatments must be tailored to harness the full potential of advantages of geopolymers

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Summary

Background

The universal solvent water is a fundamental need for the survival of biotic and abiotic components of the ecosystem on earth. Due to chemical composition and recycling of this waste material collected from electricity generating thermal power plants, several researchers are seeing fly ash as viable future solid raw component for separating contaminants in commercial wastewater treatment. It is a low-cost aluminosilicate source to produce effective microporous adsorbents like zeolites. Our study reviews the fundamental conceptual model for designing geopolymers with their characterization and the potential exploration of fly ash-based geopolymers in heavy metal remediation like arsenic, copper, lead, zinc, nickel, chromium, caesium, magnesium, cobalt, cadmium, ammonium, etc. The structural modification provides a more number of accessible sites by inducing the creation of open-framework like structure which can store a large amount of heavy metal cations via adsorption from aqueous solutions

Main text
Fly ash‐modified geopolymers for heavy metal remediation
Fly ash toxicity and heavy metals leaching in its remediation
Heavy metal leaching with fly ash geopolymeric adsorbents
Findings
11 Conclusions

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