Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148

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  • Article
    Advancements in Oil-Water Separation: the Role of Molybdenum and Tungsten Disulfide as Cutting-Edge 2D Nanomaterials
    (Elsevier, 2025) Recepoglu, Yasar Kemal; Goren, Ayseguel Yagmur
    This article reviews recent strides in synthesizing, functionalizing, and utilizing molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) and tungsten disulfide (WS2) nanomaterials owing to their exceptional wetting properties, which facilitate oilwater separation. Among various materials explored, they have also emerged as particularly promising candidates due to their high surface area, tunable surface chemistry, and unique layered structure. The twodimensional (2D) morphology offers abundant active sites, enhanced interaction with water molecules, and the ability to engineer surface wettability at the nanoscale, all of which are highly advantageous for efficient oilwater separation. Distinct separation mechanisms, performance benchmarks, and potential integration into practical separation setups were meticulously surveyed and analyzed. Furthermore, to elucidate the superiority of MoS2 and WS2 2D nanomaterials over alternative methodologies for oil-water separation, we comprehensively examined other techniques, including membrane processes, electrocoagulation, adsorption with modified materials, and biological methods. For instance, the high membrane, operational, and maintenance costs, scaling, fouling, expensive production steps, high energy consumption, and complex operations are significant limitations of other processes for oil-water separation. On the other hand, the MoS2 and WS2 nanomaterials provide sustainable and effective oil-water separation performance compared to other processes owing to their unique properties, such as superior reusability, high separation efficiency, excellent hydrophobicity (water-repelling) and oleophilicity (oil-attracting) features, significant chemical and thermal stability, and enhanced photocatalytic properties. This review showed that the oil-water separation efficiency of the MoS2 and WS2-based materials was 70-100 %. The highest oil-water separation efficiency of 100 % is observed using cellulose acetate -MoS2 fibrous sponge from a toluene-water mixture at a pH of 8. Nevertheless, while MoS2 and WS2 nanomaterials promise oil-water separation owing to their unique properties, their limitations, such as cost, scalability, environmental concerns, agglomeration, regeneration challenges, and potential toxicity, must be carefully addressed. Consequently, further research and development are necessary to overcome these hurdles and fully realize their potential in practical applications.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 7
    Citation - Scopus: 7
    Quaternary Ammonium-Modified Cellulose: a Sustainable Strategy for Purifying Aqueous Solutions Contaminated With Sunset Yellow Dye
    (Elsevier, 2025) Toprakcurumez, Halil; Recepoglu, Yasar Kemal; Arar, Ozgur
    This study showcases the remarkable efficacy of quaternary ammonium-modified cellulose as a highly sustainable biosorbent for removing Sunset Yellow (SY) dye from water. Detailed analysis was conducted using infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy for structural changes and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) for morphological changes. A minimal yet highly effective dose of 0.05 g was identified through dedicated optimization experiments, achieving near-complete removal (99 %) of SY. The biosorbent demonstrated exceptional performance across a broad pH range (2-10), accomplishing remarkable removal within just 5 min. Langmuir modeling uncovered a monolayer sorption mechanism with a high maximum capacity (107.08 mg g- 1), and thermodynamic analysis affirmed the spontaneity and favorability of the sorption process. Noteworthy is the biosorbent's impressive regeneration capabilities (up to 95 %) using 1.0 M NaOH or HCl solutions and its sustained performance over three sorption-regeneration cycles, highlighting its exceptional stability and reusability. The modified cellulose exhibited remarkable resistance to common interfering ions (chloride, nitrate, and sulfate) at 10 and 100 mg L- 1 concentrations. These combined features position quaternary ammonium-modified cellulose as a promising, sustainable, and efficient option for dye wastewater treatment.