A polyphenol-based hydrogel for enabling enhanced metal ion sorption, antimicrobial activity, and water remediation
JAWED, Aquib and Rizvi, Aiman and Çitoğlu, Senem and Azeem, Iqra and Maclean, Michelle and Golder, Animes Kumar and Pandey, Lalit and Duran, Hatice and Davidson, Christine and Lau, K. H. Aaron (2025) A polyphenol-based hydrogel for enabling enhanced metal ion sorption, antimicrobial activity, and water remediation. ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering. ISSN 2168-0485 (In Press) (https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.5c01824)
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Abstract
Naturally derived, highly functional, and widely accessible materials represent enabling technologies for sustainable development. However, current bio-derived materials often present a trade-off between sustainability potential and functional performance. Sorbents that can remove potentially toxic elements (PTEs) and inhibit bacterial growth to enable water remediation exemplify this dilemma. Conventional plant-based biopolymer materials are attractive for their low cost and environmental compatibility, but many require additional specialized synthetic components to impart the requisite performance. We now report an approach for preparing majority plant polyphenol hydrogels composed of the widely available tannic acid (TA) at up to an unprecedented 75% content. A minority seaweed alginate (Alg) matrix is used to bind TA into conveniently handled beads. Convenient application is demonstrated by conducting all experiments with dried beads rehydrated in the application solution. Multifold enhancements in water swelling, sorption of a suite of PTEs, and antimicrobial activity are found with increasing TA content. Moreover, we report a novel additional enhancement of antimicrobial activity based on TA-induced iron incorporation, as characterized by XPS, SEM, TGA, and EDX. Further sorption enhancement of a PTE in this Alg-TA-Fe matrix is also demonstrated. Our hydrogels can be produced at room temperature in low resource settings and exhibit performance generally superior to other biopolymer sorbents and on par with those combining synthetic functionalities. A qualitative evaluation of our polyphenol hydrogels’ sustainability potential is performed based on its novel functionalities, greenhouse gas emissions, environmental compatibility, material abundance, and potential for localized production.
ORCID iDs
JAWED, Aquib, Rizvi, Aiman




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Item type: Article ID code: 92728 Dates: DateEvent25 April 2025Published25 April 2025AcceptedSubjects: Technology > Chemical engineering Department: Faculty of Science > Pure and Applied Chemistry
Faculty of Engineering > Electronic and Electrical Engineering
Strategic Research Themes > Ocean, Air and Space
Strategic Research Themes > Measurement Science and Enabling Technologies
Strategic Research Themes > Health and WellbeingDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 30 Apr 2025 10:56 Last modified: 30 Apr 2025 10:56 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/92728