Rice husk-derived mesoporous biogenic silica nanoparticles for gravity chromatography

  • Devendra Shrestha
  • , Tulsi Nayaju
  • , M. R. Kandel
  • , Raja Ram Pradhananga*
  • , Chan Hee Park*
  • , Cheol Sang Kim*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Abstract

Biogenic silica nanoparticle is a superb alternative to synthetic silica because of their highly active, polar, and porous nanostructure with a large interior area. Among the available agricultural bioresources, biogenic silica extracted from rice husks could be a simple, easily available, and cost-effective resource to use as the stationary phase for the column chromatographic technique. In the present study, highly pure amorphous biogenic silica nanoparticles (bSNPs) were synthesized using rice husk by a controlled combustion route followed by the sol-gel method. The bSNPs show better performance for the separation and isolation of ortho- and para-nitrophenol and nitroaniline. The outstanding performance of the as-synthesized bSNPs is attributed to the high surface area, high porosity, and presence of Si–OH polar bonds. These preliminary findings imply that rice husk, an agricultural waste, could be an alternative source of silica and applicable as a stationary phase in column chromatography.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere15142
JournalHeliyon
Volume9
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023.04

Keywords

  • Amorphous
  • Biogenic silica nanoparticles
  • Column chromatography
  • Rice husk silica
  • Sol-gel

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