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Investigation of herbicide sorption-desorption using pristine and organoclays to explore the potential carriers for controlled release formulation

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posted on 2025-05-09, 03:02 authored by Santosh Kumar Paul, Yunfei Xi, Peter Sanderson, Amal Kanti Deb, Md Rashidul IslamMd Rashidul Islam, Ravendra NaiduRavendra Naidu
Injudicious application of available commercial herbicide formulations leads to water, air and soil contamination, which adversely affect the environment, ecosystems and living organisms. Controlled release formulation (CRFs) could be an effective way to reduce the problems associated with commercially available herbicides. Organo-montmorillonites are prominent carrier materials for synthesising CRFs of commercial herbicides. Quaternary amine and organosilane functionalised organo-montmorillonite and pristine montmorillonite were used to investigate their potential as suitable carriers for CRFs in herbicide delivery systems. The experiment involved a batch adsorption process with successive dilution method. Results revealed that pristine montmorillonite is not a suitable carrier for CRFs of 2,4-D due to its low adsorption capacity and hydrophilic nature. Conversely, octadecylamine (ODA) and ODA-aminopropyltriethoxysilane (APTES) functionalised montmorillonite has better adsorption capacities. Adsorption of 2,4-D onto both organoclays is higher at pH.3 (232.58% for MMT1 and 161.29% for MMT2) compared to higher pH until pH.7 (49.75% for MMT1 and 68.49% for MMT2). Integrated structural characterisation studies confirmed the presence of 2,4-D on the layered organoclays. The Freundlich adsorption isotherm model fitted best to the experimental data, which revealed an energetically heterogeneous surface of the experimental organoclays, and adsorption which specifically involved chemisorption. The cumulative desorption percentages of adsorbed 2,4-D from MMT1(2,4-D loaded) and MMT2(2,4-D loaded) after seven desorption cycles were 65.53% and 51.45%, respectively. This outcome indicates: firstly, both organoclays are potential carrier materials for CRFs of 2,4-D; secondly, they have the ability to reduce the instantaneous release of 2,4-D immediately after application; and thirdly, eco-toxicity is greatly diminished.

History

Journal title

Chemosphere

Volume

337

Article number

139335

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Engineering, Science and Environment

School

Global Centre for Environmental Remediation (GCER)

Rights statement

© 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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