Eng, Vol. 7, Pages 38: Recent Advances in the Application of Natural Coagulants for Sustainable Water Purification


Eng, Vol. 7, Pages 38: Recent Advances in the Application of Natural Coagulants for Sustainable Water Purification

Eng doi: 10.3390/eng7010038

Authors:
Davide Frumento
Ştefan Ţălu

Growing pressure from shrinking freshwater supplies and worsening pollution has heightened the demand for more effective water treatment solutions, especially those that promote reuse. This review synthesizes findings from 235 peer-reviewed papers examining plant-, mineral-, and other naturally derived coagulants used in surface water purification. Overall, these materials demonstrate turbidity reduction performance on par with conventional chemical coagulants across a wide range of initial turbidity levels (roughly 50–500 NTU). They are generally inexpensive, biodegradable, low in toxicity, and produce smaller volumes of residual sludge. Most function through mechanisms such as polymer-chain bridging or charge neutralization. However, their deployment at scale is still constrained by limited commercialization pathways, technical integration issues, and uneven public acceptance. Continued cross-disciplinary work is required to refine their performance and broaden their use, particularly in regions with limited resources or rural infrastructure.



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Davide Frumento www.mdpi.com