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Rice Husk Research: From Environmental Pollutant to a Promising Source of Organo-Mineral Raw Materials

Rice husk is a large-tonnage waste left from rice production. It is not subject to humification and therefore becomes a serious environmental pollutant. Due to the presence of two essential elements—carbon and silicon—in its composition, rice husk is a promising organo-mineral raw material. The know...

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Autores principales: Satbaev, Baimakhan, Yefremova, Svetlana, Zharmenov, Abdurassul, Kablanbekov, Askhat, Yermishin, Sergey, Shalabaev, Nurgali, Satbaev, Arsen, Khen, Vitaliy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8348607/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34361313
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14154119
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author Satbaev, Baimakhan
Yefremova, Svetlana
Zharmenov, Abdurassul
Kablanbekov, Askhat
Yermishin, Sergey
Shalabaev, Nurgali
Satbaev, Arsen
Khen, Vitaliy
author_facet Satbaev, Baimakhan
Yefremova, Svetlana
Zharmenov, Abdurassul
Kablanbekov, Askhat
Yermishin, Sergey
Shalabaev, Nurgali
Satbaev, Arsen
Khen, Vitaliy
author_sort Satbaev, Baimakhan
collection PubMed
description Rice husk is a large-tonnage waste left from rice production. It is not subject to humification and therefore becomes a serious environmental pollutant. Due to the presence of two essential elements—carbon and silicon—in its composition, rice husk is a promising organo-mineral raw material. The known methods for processing of rice husk are associated with the formation of even more aggressive waste. The creation of a waste-free technology for processing this plant material requires a detailed study. Rice husk of Kyzylorda oblast was studied using IR, SEM, TA, TPD-MS, EPR, and TEM methods. It was determined that under a temperature up to 500 °C, the ligno-carbohydrate component of rice husk decomposes almost completely. Three main peaks are recorded during the decomposition: hemicellulose at 200 °C, cellulose at 265 °C, and lignin at 350–360 °C. This process is endothermic. However, above of 300 °C the exothermic reactions associated with the formation of new substances and condensation processes in the solid residue begin to prevail. This explains the increase in the concentration of paramagnetic centers (PMCs) in products of rice husk carbonization in the range of up to 450 °C. Further increase in temperature leads to a decrease in the number of PMCs as a result of carbon graphite-like structures formation. The silicon–carbon product of rice husk carbonization (nanocomposite) is formed by interconnected nanoscale particles of carbon and silicon dioxide, the modification of which depends on the temperature of carbonization. The obtained data allow management of the rice husk utilization process while manufacturing products in demand based on ecofriendly technologies.
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spelling pubmed-83486072021-08-08 Rice Husk Research: From Environmental Pollutant to a Promising Source of Organo-Mineral Raw Materials Satbaev, Baimakhan Yefremova, Svetlana Zharmenov, Abdurassul Kablanbekov, Askhat Yermishin, Sergey Shalabaev, Nurgali Satbaev, Arsen Khen, Vitaliy Materials (Basel) Article Rice husk is a large-tonnage waste left from rice production. It is not subject to humification and therefore becomes a serious environmental pollutant. Due to the presence of two essential elements—carbon and silicon—in its composition, rice husk is a promising organo-mineral raw material. The known methods for processing of rice husk are associated with the formation of even more aggressive waste. The creation of a waste-free technology for processing this plant material requires a detailed study. Rice husk of Kyzylorda oblast was studied using IR, SEM, TA, TPD-MS, EPR, and TEM methods. It was determined that under a temperature up to 500 °C, the ligno-carbohydrate component of rice husk decomposes almost completely. Three main peaks are recorded during the decomposition: hemicellulose at 200 °C, cellulose at 265 °C, and lignin at 350–360 °C. This process is endothermic. However, above of 300 °C the exothermic reactions associated with the formation of new substances and condensation processes in the solid residue begin to prevail. This explains the increase in the concentration of paramagnetic centers (PMCs) in products of rice husk carbonization in the range of up to 450 °C. Further increase in temperature leads to a decrease in the number of PMCs as a result of carbon graphite-like structures formation. The silicon–carbon product of rice husk carbonization (nanocomposite) is formed by interconnected nanoscale particles of carbon and silicon dioxide, the modification of which depends on the temperature of carbonization. The obtained data allow management of the rice husk utilization process while manufacturing products in demand based on ecofriendly technologies. MDPI 2021-07-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8348607/ /pubmed/34361313 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14154119 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Satbaev, Baimakhan
Yefremova, Svetlana
Zharmenov, Abdurassul
Kablanbekov, Askhat
Yermishin, Sergey
Shalabaev, Nurgali
Satbaev, Arsen
Khen, Vitaliy
Rice Husk Research: From Environmental Pollutant to a Promising Source of Organo-Mineral Raw Materials
title Rice Husk Research: From Environmental Pollutant to a Promising Source of Organo-Mineral Raw Materials
title_full Rice Husk Research: From Environmental Pollutant to a Promising Source of Organo-Mineral Raw Materials
title_fullStr Rice Husk Research: From Environmental Pollutant to a Promising Source of Organo-Mineral Raw Materials
title_full_unstemmed Rice Husk Research: From Environmental Pollutant to a Promising Source of Organo-Mineral Raw Materials
title_short Rice Husk Research: From Environmental Pollutant to a Promising Source of Organo-Mineral Raw Materials
title_sort rice husk research: from environmental pollutant to a promising source of organo-mineral raw materials
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8348607/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34361313
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14154119
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