Ionic Liquids in Decontamination of Toxic Metals Impurities
- Authors: Sheetal1, Anita Kumari2, Manjeet Singh3, Sanjeeve Thakur4, Balaram Pani5, Ashish Kumar Singh6
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View Affiliations Hide Affiliations1 Department of Chemistry, Netaji Subhas University of Technology, Dwarka Sector 3, New Delhi 110078, India 2 Department of Chemistry, Miranda House College, University of Delhi, New Delhi-110007, India 3 Department of Chemistry, School of Physical Sciences, Mizoram University, Aizawl796004, Mizoram, India 4 Department of Chemistry, Netaji Subhas University of Technology, Dwarka Sector 3, New Delhi- 110078, India 5 Department of Chemistry, Bhaskaracharya College of Applied Science, University of Delhi, Sector 2, Dwarka, New Delhi 110075, India 6 Department of Chemistry, Netaji Subhas University of Technology, Dwarka Sector 3, New Delhi- 110078, India
- Source: Ionic Liquids: Eco-friendly Substitutes for Surface and Interface Applications , pp 227-247
- Publication Date: July 2023
- Language: English
The wide use of noxious and non-degradable metals due to industrialization has become a major factor in rising health concerns. Diseases associated may involve cardiovascular disorders, brain damage, cancer, etc., and this leads to the development of certain methods for the sole purpose of cleaning water, soil, air, etc., to remove metals categorized as toxic ones. Ionic liquids with remarkable thermal stability, association ability, exhibiting low vapour emission, etc., are considered eco-friendly for the decontamination of toxic metal impurities. These ionic liquids involve certain modes of interactions like an electrostatic, dipole, van der Waals, etc., for the effective separation and extraction of metals. Also, the property of reusability associated with ionic liquids makes them be used on a wide scale.
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