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Functionalization of polymers and nanomaterials for water treatment, food packaging, textile and biomedical applications: a review Full text
2021
Makvandi, Pooyan | Iftekhar, Sidra | Pizzetti, Fabio | Zarepour, Atefeh | Zare, Ehsan Nazarzadeh | Ashrafizadeh, Milad | Agarwal, Tarun | Padil, Vinod V. T. | Mohammadinejad, Reza | Sillanpaa, Mika | Maiti, Tapas Kumar | Perale, Giuseppe | Z̤arrābī, ʻAlī | Rossi, Filippo
The inert nature of most commercial polymers and nanomaterials results in limitations of applications in various industrial fields. This can be solved by surface modifications to improve physicochemical and biological properties, such as adhesion, printability, wetting and biocompatibility. Polymer functionalization allows to graft specific moieties and conjugate molecules that improve material performances. In the last decades, several approaches have been designed in the industry and academia to graft functional groups on surfaces. Here, we review surface decoration of polymers and nanomaterials, with focus on major industrial applications in the medical field, textile industry, water treatment and food packaging. We discuss the advantages and challenges of polymer functionalization. More knowledge is needed on the biology behind cell–polymer interactions, nanosafety and manufacturing at the industrial scale.
Show more [+] Less [-]Water Flows in the Spanish Economy: Agri-Food Sectors, Trade and Households Diets in an Input-Output Framework Full text
2012
Cazcarro, Ignacio | Duarte, Rosa | Sánchez-Chóliz, Julio
Seeking to advance our knowledge of water flows and footprints and the factors underlying them, we apply, on the basis of an extended 2004 Social Accounting Matrix for Spain, an open Leontief model in which households and foreign trade are the exogenous accounts. The model shows the water embodied in products bought by consumers (which we identify with the Water Footprint) and in trade (identified with virtual water trade). Activities with relevant water inflows and outflows such as the agrarian sector, textiles, and the agri-food industry are examined in detail using breakdowns of the relevant accounts. The data reflect only physical consumption, differentiating between green and blue water. The results reveal that Spain is a net importer of water. Flows are then related to key trading partners to show the large quantities involved. The focus on embodied (or virtual) water by activity is helpful to distinguish indirect from direct consumption as embodied water can be more than 300 times direct consumption in some food industry activities. Finally, a sensitivity analysis applied to changes in diets shows the possibility of reducing water uses by modifying households’ behavior to encourage healthier eating.
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