Open Access Article
Tongtong Wang
*a,
Soni Patyalb,
Mu. Naushadc,
Pooja Dhimanb,
Gaurav Sharma*ab,
Ying Gaoa,
Sen Wangd,
Weiqian Lie and
Jinjun Cai*ef
aInstitute for Interdisciplinary and Innovation Research, Xi'an University of Architecture and Technology, Xi'an 710055, P.R. China. E-mail: tongtwang@163.com
bInternational Research Centre of Nanotechnology for Himalayan Sustainability (IRCNHS), Shoolini University, Solan 173229, India. E-mail: gaurav.541@shooliniuniversity.com
cDepartment of Chemistry, College of Science, King Saud University, P.O. Box 2455, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia
dSchool of Resources Engineering, Xi'an University of Architecture and Technology, Xi'an 710055, P. R. China
eInstitute of Agricultural Resources and Environment, Ningxia Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences, Yinchuan, 750002, P.R. China
fThe Crop Research Institute, Ningxia Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Science/Ningxia Crop Breeding Engineering and Technology Research Center, Yinchuan 750002, P. R. China. E-mail: nxyccai@163.com
First published on 8th April 2026
Human-driven activities related to diverse industries such as textiles, pharmaceuticals, plastics, leather, and agriculture contribute significantly to the discharge of pollutants into aquatic environments, thereby threatening the ecological balance and posing a risk to living organisms. Over the past few years, algae have been acknowledged as a cost-effective and sustainable resource for the detoxification of harmful pollutants, primarily through mechanisms such as intracellular biodegradation, bioaccumulation, and biosorption. Besides the direct involvement of algae in the removal of pollutants, they can be converted into carbon-rich materials such as hydrochar, biochar, and activated carbon. These materials possess high specific surface areas and different functional groups, which make them quite effective for the adsorption of organic pollutants in wastewater treatment. Algal-derived adsorbents exhibit high adsorption efficiency because of the synergistic effects of various interactions, including electrostatic forces, hydrogen bonding, π–π interactions, and pore filling effects, all of which depend on the engineered surface functional groups and porous structure of algae-derived carbon-rich materials. This review uniquely explores various algal species for the preparation of adsorbents and also examines the modification methods used to convert algae into adsorbents. It examines their effectiveness in the removal of organic contaminants from water systems. Future research needs to bridge the gap between laboratory-scale and real-world applications, especially through pilot-scale studies in real wastewater and comprehensive life-cycle assessments.
Various in-depth research works have been conducted, mainly focusing on the identification, refinement, and engineering of high-performance sorbents that effectively remove pollutants from aqueous environments. Among the wide range of materials tested, algae have been recognized as the most promising because of their dual capacity to absorb CO2 and purify wastewater, along with algal uptake and biomass production, delivering carbon-rich substances that make it possible to close the material cycle in a sustainable and green way from aquatic systems.4,5 Carbon-rich materials derived from algae such as activated carbon, hydrochar, and biochar obtained from pyrolysis, hydrothermal carbonization, and torrefaction, respectively, have high adsorption efficiency for wastewater remediation due to their porous structure, aromatic stability, large surface area, and numerous functional groups, which allow pollutants to be removed effectively through enhanced cation exchange and surface interaction mechanisms, hence emerging as promising materials for environmental remediation.6,7
To write this review, we searched the relevant literature in databases (or websites) such as Web of Science, Scopus, Google Scholar, PubMed, etc., and the search keywords included, but were not limited to, algae, algae-derived biochar/carbon, adsorbent, water treatment/purification, organic pollutants, pharmaceutical wastewater, removal/adsorption, modification, synthesis, adsorption mechanism, and searched by keyword combinations to ensure coverage and representativeness. To encompass the most current developments in synthesis techniques, adsorption characteristics, and the mechanism of algal-based adsorbents, the literature section concentrated on high quality studies published within the last ten years. With an emphasis on the elimination of artificial dyes and pharmaceutical residues, this article offers a comprehensive analysis of carbon-rich materials derived from algae for water purification.
The focus is on using microwave assistance, chemical functionalization, and pyrolysis to produce these materials. The physical and chemical properties of these materials are critically evaluated. Moreover, the discussion goes into great depth on how these materials work incredibly well to adsorb organic pollutants after surface modification. Furthermore, the research discussed herein considers the regeneration and reuse processes of adsorbents, highlighting their technological viability in environmentally friendly or sustainable water treatment systems.
| Methods for water purification | Advantages | Challenges | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filtration: filtration refers to the action of filtering unwanted contaminants from water to make it clean and fit for consumption | ![]() |
Poor removal of dissolved and fine pollutants, limited efficiency for organic contaminants, needs maintenance to prevent clogging, and produces sludge, which requires proper disposal | 44 and 45 |
| Coagulation: in water treatment, this is a chemical process of aggregating fine particles into larger, settleable flocs | ![]() |
Coagulation requires delicate pH management with alkaline additives, but is still complicated, generates hazardous sludge, is less efficient, and is dependent on proper functioning, which limits its reliability in regular water purification | 46–48 |
| Distillation: distillation is a separation process that is used to separate the components of a mixture based on their relative volatility | ![]() |
Distillation separates impurities by changing their phases, but it requires significant energy. Besides, volatile compounds are not removed, hence its efficiency is limited | 46 |
| Crystallization: it is a process of separating solids from liquids during which the dissolved solute comes out of the solution as pure crystalline solids | ![]() |
The crystallization process has several problems, such as high capital and energy consumption, mechanical complexity, dependence on agents or heating, operational difficulties, limited applicability, and restricted treatment capacity | 49 |
| Oxidation: oxidation in water treatment is a chemical process that converts harmful contaminants into less toxic, stable, or inert substances | ![]() |
High operational cost and energy requirements, difficult monitoring, production of toxic intermediates, radical scavenging by nontarget compounds, trouble in heavy metal removal, operational errors, absence of standards, and limitations in scaling up, hindering its practical implementation | 50 |
| Precipitation: precipitation is a chemical process in which dissolved metal ions are transformed into insoluble compounds through pH adjustment, forming solid particles that can be separated from the solution | ![]() |
Produces a large amount of sludge, which requires proper disposal, depends on chemical inputs, which additionally increase the cost, and its efficiency is highly dependent on accurate dosing and mixing | 44 and 47 |
| Membrane processes: these are physical separation methods that purify water by selectively removing contaminants without any chemical addition or phase change | ![]() |
Critical challenges associated with membrane processes include high energy consumption, intensive use of chemicals, fouling, costly cleaning, and residual toxicity | 51–53 |
| Adsorption: adsorption in water treatment is a surface phenomenon through which pollutants stick to a solid adsorbent either by physisorption or chemisorption | ![]() |
Faces drawbacks such as high production costs, reduced efficiency under varying acidic or basic conditions, potential leaching of pollutants that may cause secondary pollution, sensitivity towards water chemistry and organic matter, and stability issues in real-world applications | 54 |
Adsorption is generally chosen for the removal of organic pollutants because of its ease of operation and versatility, although there are several challenges that make its large-scale use challenging. Adsorption is a mass transfer process in which molecules accumulate on the surface of solids instead of diffusing into the bulk phase. Its two main modes of action are chemisorption, which happens through stronger, usually irreversible chemical interactions, and physisorption, which happens through weak, reversible van der Waals forces.55 Additionally, the adsorption removal efficiency is significantly influenced by the physicochemical properties of the target contaminant. However, adsorbent surface chemistry, porosity, functional groups, adsorbate size, polarity, and concentration present challenges for the adsorption of organic pollutants. Furthermore, the adsorption efficiency is further complicated by variables such as pH, temperature, and ionic strength, which continuously make it challenging to achieve selectivity, scalability, and economic feasibility in real-water pollutant removal applications.56 The competitive adsorption effect, which arises when many adsorbate species compete for the few available adsorbent surface sites, is another difficulty in the adsorption process. Lower selectivity results from increasing competition amongst adsorbates when their initial concentration in water is increased.57 These limitations become particularly important in the removal of synthetic colors, agrochemicals, pharmaceuticals, and personal care items, because they have complex and inert molecular structures and different physicochemical behaviors in water environments.
Despite its drawbacks, adsorption is still the most popular method for water remediation because of its great capacity and simple operation. In this work, we specifically address the use of algae to remove organic pollutants from water. The primary mechanisms of algal biosorption are complexation and electrostatic attractions, with the cell wall possessing functional groups such as phosphate, hydroxyl, carboxyl, and amino groups that provide potent interactions that enable the binding of pollutants and the intake of nutrients,1 which we will discuss in a later section.
Algal cells, which are the main contributors to more than half of the photosynthesis globally, not only maintain the food chain and recycle CO2 and nutrients through light-driven metabolism, but also act as eco-functional agents in phycoremediation, hence facilitating pollutant removal and biomass recovery from wastewater, along with contributions to sustainable energy, food, and carbon mitigation strategies.63
The reason algal-based adsorbents can efficiently adsorb organic pollutants through multiple mechanisms is primarily derived from the chemical composition of their feedstock, combined with the synergistic effects of chemical heterogeneity and porous structure imparted by the thermochemical conversion process. Firstly, algae are rich in proteins, polysaccharides, and lipids, and their inherent polar functional groups, such as hydroxyl (–OH), carboxyl (–COOH), and amine (–NH2), provide natural sites for the adsorption of organic pollutants through electrostatic attraction and hydrogen bonding.4,68,81 During hydrothermal carbonization, pyrolysis, and chemical activation, these groups are converted into active sites for ligand binding or hydrogen bonding. Meanwhile, biomass forms sp2 hybridized carbons through deoxy-decarboxylation and arylation, which provide a structural foundation for π–π interactions with pollutants containing benzene rings.75,82 Secondly, natural minerals (e.g., Ca2+, Mg2+, and K+) in algae are partially retained after carbonization or are present on the surface of the adsorbent in the form of carbonates and oxides.69,70 They not only allow the adsorption of cationic pollutants by ion exchange, but may also coordinate with the electron-rich groups of organic pollutants, thus enhancing the complexation and immobilization of polar organics. Moreover, defects and a large number of oxygen- or nitrogen-containing functional groups may be further introduced into the carbon skeleton through enhancement strategies such as chemical activation (e.g., KOH and H3PO4) or heteroatom doping (e.g., N and S). These strategies not only significantly increase the surface charge density, reinforcing electrostatic interactions, but also act as electron donors or acceptors, adjusting the π-electron cloud density and thus enhancing the π–π interaction.71 Additionally, the acidity and point of zero charge (pHpzc) of algal-based adsorbent surfaces can be modulated during preparation so that they exhibit variable charges under different pH conditions, thereby selectively adsorbing organic pollutants with surface polarity by electrostatic attraction.68 Finally, the microporous and mesoporous structures of algal-based adsorbents provide both a high specific surface area to improve the adsorption performance and ensure less diffusion resistance during the solution mass transfer process, so that chemical interactions and physical adsorption synergize to complete the multistep adsorption process from the surface to diffusion within their pores.6,7 Therefore, algal-based adsorbents are essentially multifunctional materials integrating polar sites, aromatic structures, inorganic mineral components, and abundant porosity, and their multiple adsorption mechanisms do not exist in isolation but work synergistically in the organic pollutant removal process. In summary, these adsorption mechanisms are vividly expressed in Fig. 3.
Based on the in-depth understanding of the above-mentioned adsorption mechanisms, the advantages of adsorption can be amplified, and the selectivity and practicability can be improved through targeted material design strategies. Also, the synergistic removal mechanism can be strengthened by regulating the preparation parameters according to the molecular characteristics of the target pollutants. Firstly, nitrogen- and oxygen-rich algal strains or complexes with multifunctional materials are preferred in the selection of precursors to naturally provide more sites where hydrogen bonding and complexation can be formed. Secondly, a balance between promoting aromatization to enhance the π-electron cloud and preserving the pore structure can be achieved by carefully controlling the thermal treatment temperature, time, and heating rate, thereby combining strong interactions with pollutants with a high specific surface area.70 For example, to efficiently remove aromatic contaminants (e.g., tetracycline), pyrolysis at higher temperatures (>700 °C) could be used to enhance the graphitization of the carbon material and thus maximize the π–π interactions.70 Thirdly, pHpzc and polar sites may be adjusted through activation or surface engineering to achieve the selective adsorption of specific ionic or polar pollutants. For complexation-dependent targets, native minerals can be retained or gently doped with non-toxic metals (Fe, Mn, Cu, etc.) to form stabilizing coordination sites. For example, for ionic or highly polar pollutants (e.g., dyes or pesticides), surface charge can be modulated and specific metal sites introduced by acid treatment or metal salt impregnation to optimize electrostatic interactions and surface complexation. Fourthly, combined with the advantages of KOH activation, the templating method or acid etching technique could build mesoporous and microporous complementary porous structures to optimize the adsorption energy and mass transfer rate.71 Meanwhile, this not only introduces abundant surface functional groups but also enhances hydrogen bonding and electrostatic adsorption. Finally, environmental compatibility and renewability must be considered at the same time when designing materials. Additionally, for mechanism-driven experimental optimization that can be effectively translated into scalable and sustainable engineering solutions, multi-cycle and interference ion assessments in complex water bodies should be conducted. For example, the additional adsorption sites provided by compositing magnetic nanoparticles (e.g., Fe3O4) with alginate-based materials also confer magnetic separation properties, which facilitate recycling and reuse after adsorption.69
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| Fig. 4 (a) Efficient adsorption of drugs by modified biomass and (b) reusability of MAB in pharmaceutical wastewater treatments. (c) Prepyrolysis, copyrolysis, and coprecipitation synthesis route and (d) reuse efficiency of NMPBs. Reproduced from ref. 84 and 89, with permission from ELSEVIER,84,89 copyright 2018 and 2024. | ||
More specifically TRAM adsorption was observed at neutral pH, following pseudo-order-kinetics. The Langmuir isotherm fitting confirmed monolayer coverage, yielding a maximum adsorption capacity of 140.25 mg g−1. The adsorption of pharmaceuticals on the modified algal biomass is achieved through hydrophilic interactions between the functional groups of biosorbent surface and the MAB, which exhibited very high reusability, as it retained high adsorption efficiency with only a slight decrease of 4.5% after three consecutive cycles, as shown in Fig. 4(b), confirming its use as a sustainable biosorbent for pharmaceutical wastewater treatment. A carbon-rich material, named CMBB@H2SO4, was synthesised from Bifurcaria bifurcata (BB) algae via an ultrasonic-assisted pyrolysis process, and then chemically activated with sulphuric acid to improve its surface functionality and adsorption capacity.85 This material was tailored explicitly for the efficient removal of aspirin from aqueous solutions. The adsorption of aspirin on the prepared material is spontaneous, occurs naturally without the need for external energy, is exothermic, and is controlled by physical interactions. The adsorption kinetics of aspirin on CMBB@H2SO4 followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, indicating physisorption, while its equilibrium data fitted the Langmuir isotherm, thus confirming monolayer adsorption on a homogeneous surface. This material exhibited an impressive performance, which remained almost unchanged for 10 reuse cycles, with only a minimal 4% efficiency loss. This synthesized material exhibited a high surface area of 898.2 m2 g−1 and achieved an excellent adsorption efficiency up to 2633.04 mg g−1 under optimized conditions (adsorbent mass of 0.02 g/100 mL, pH 3.4, and temperature (temp.) of 298 K), and at the same time, it can be used as a cost-effective alternative to remove pharmaceutical pollutants from aqueous solutions. To further optimize the adsorption process, response surface methodology (RSM) in combination with central composite design (CCD) was used to evaluate the combined effects of the operational parameters. The quadratic model was statistically significant and had a very high coefficient of determination, indicating a very good match between the predicted and the experimental results. The interaction analysis showed that a simultaneous increase in adsorbent dose and pH would result in the most substantial improvement in aspirin removal efficiency. The optimum conditions correspond to pH 3.4, adsorbent dosage of 20 mg, and aspirin concentration of 150 mg L−1. The significant influence of pH is consistent with the fact that surface charge and protonation and deprotonation mechanisms play a major role in aspirin adsorption.
In general, RSM provides a reliable tool that not only fits the studies of mechanism but also facilitates the scaling-up of the process. Another study used an adsorption technique to assess the removal of pharmaceutical pollutants, specifically aspirin and ketoprofen, from water using porous carbon produced from Laminaria digitata that was chemically activated with NaOH (PCLD@NaOH).86 Under ideal conditions (adsorbent dosage: 0.02 g/100 mL, pH: 3.4, temp.: 25 °C), the modified material exhibited a significant adsorption capacity for aspirin (970.88 mg g−1) compared to ketoprofen (443.45 mg g−1). It also showed a specific surface area of 799 m2 g−1. The adsorption of aspirin and ketoprofen on the prepared material followed Avrami-fractional kinetics and the Liu isotherm. This material showed very high reusability and retained more than 90% of its adsorption capacity for aspirin and ketoprofen through 5 regeneration cycles, with just a minor decline in performance loss; therefore, its structural stability and long-term adsorption capacity were confirmed. The study also integrates density functional theory (DFT) and RSM to rationalize and optimize the adsorption process, in addition to demonstrating high adsorption capacity and reusability. The lower HOMO–LUMO gap (HOMO: highest occupied molecular orbital and LUMO: lowest unoccupied molecular orbital), higher electrophilicity index, greater softness, and higher chemical potential of aspirin all favour electron transfer and its adsorption on the substrate, and showed that it is more reactive than ketoprofen, according to the DFT analysis. Complementary optimization by RSM confirmed these results, as statistically valid quadratic models showed a very good agreement between the predicted and experimental data. Temperature was the most influential parameter since higher temperatures lowered the adsorption efficiency, while the adsorbent dose and pH also had some influence on the process. Under the optimum conditions, the removal efficiencies between the two drugs were 86.12% for ketoprofen and 95.33% for aspirin, thus correlating the higher reactivity of aspirin with its better adsorption performance and demonstrating RSM to be a reliable predictive tool for process enhancement.
Choi et al. (2020) used the pyrolysis technique at various temperatures to formulate biochars from the microalgae species Spirulina sp. to remove tetracycline (TC) from water.87 The aromaticity, surface area, and hydrophobicity of the biochar were significantly improved by an increase in the pyrolysis temperature, with SPAL-BC750 exhibiting the best properties. This material showed intense crystallinity and a variety of functional groups (C–N, C–O, CH2, and CO32−), resulting in a very high TC adsorption capacity of 132.8 mg g−1 under the optimised conditions (adsorbent mass of 0.005 g mL−1, pH 6, and temp of 20 °C). The adsorption data were best represented by the Langmuir isotherm and pseudo-first-order kinetics. The adsorption process was dominated by hydrophobic interactions, π–π stacking, electrostatic attractions, and metal complexation, indicating that the material could be a low-cost adsorbent for wastewater contaminated with antibiotics. In addition, statistical evaluation using Pearson's correlation analysis showed that the pyrolysis temperature had a significant negative impact on most mineral contents (Ca, Mg, N, P, Fe, and K) but a positive impact on ash content, surface area, H/C ratio, and TC adsorption capacity. The increase in adsorption capacity at higher pyrolysis temperatures was attributed to the increase in carbon content, decrease in H and O, more ash, and a large surface area. In particular, the H/C ratio showed a strong negative correlation with temperature; thus, the achievement of hydrophobicity and aromaticity was more efficient at higher pyrolysis levels. The adsorption capacity was majorly influenced by surface area and H/C ratio, which is consistent with the increase in TC removal through higher pyrolysis temperatures, large surface areas, and lower H/C ratios. In another study, zeolite-modified biochar derived from Sargassum crassifolium via pyrolysis and slurry coating showed enhanced ciprofloxacin removal due to the increase in active sites and enhancement in surface area up to 124.359 m2 g−1.88
This hybrid material achieved a ciprofloxacin adsorption capacity of 93.65 mg g−1, mainly through electrostatic interactions and hydrogen bonding, with the pH range of 6.5–8 being the region of maximum efficiency where the processes were one of chemisorption and physisorption. The adsorption data showed that the Freundlich model fitted best, while the kinetics were well described by the pseudo-second-order and Elovich models. This modified biochar presents a porous and inexpensive way of filtering domestic greywater in soaking pits; thus, it can get rid of personal care products and pharmaceutical residues. Also, since it can be produced very quickly at home, it is an ideal solution for coastal communities. Wu et al. (2021) synthesized biochar from Enteromorpha prolifera and modified it with potassium hydroxide to enhance its surface properties.90 After modification, this material showed a large surface area of 2172.08 m2 g−1. The final material showed the capability of efficiently removing sulfamethoxazole, a typical antibiotic contaminant. After modification of the synthesized material, it demonstrated a very high sorption capacity for sulfamethoxazole, reaching as high as 744 mg g−1, which was mainly controlled by both physical and chemical interactions such as pore filling, hydrogen bonding, electrostatic forces, and π–π interactions. The pseudo-second-order kinetics for the sorption of sulfamethoxazole onto the modified material indicated that surface interactions were mostly unimportant in the adsorption process. Both the Freundlich (multilayer adsorption) and Langmuir (monolayer adsorption) models, which suggest the dual adsorption behaviour of the system, are well-aligned with the isotherm fitting. The biosorbent with optimized properties maintained 94% adsorption efficiency after five reuse cycles, demonstrating powerful regeneration ability and a stable performance for the eco-friendly removal of antibiotic pollutants from wastewater.
Another study has also been done on biochar production from Ascophyllum nodosum through the hydrothermal carbonization technique and ZnCl2 activation, enabling ciprofloxacin adsorption (150–400 mg g−1) over a wide range of conditions (adsorbent dosage of 50 mg L−1, pH range of 3–11, and temperature range of 5–45 °C).91 The efficiency was controlled by the ionic composition, pH, and water matrix, which essentially highlights algal biochar as a green and very effective adsorbent for the removal of antibiotics from water. Moreover, pseudo-second-order kinetics and the Langmuir isotherm best fitted the adsorption data. Another study explored mesoporous biochars, which were developed by H3PO4 activation from Gelidium amansii (GAB) for the removal of norfloxacin (NOR) from seawater, as shown in Fig. 5(a).92 GAB3, the product obtained at an acid-to-biomass ratio of 3, exhibited a specific surface area of 641.33 m2 g−1 and a maximum adsorption capacity for norfloxacin of 166.48 mg g−1 in seawater and 201.80 in deionised water at a temperature of 450 °C with an adsorbent dosage of 0.5 g L−1, which is attributed to its increased mesoporosity and decreased number of oxygenated groups. Moreover, it was able to retain ∼80% of its NOR removal efficiency after four reuse cycles, indicating its strong reusability and structure stability during repeated use. While adsorption was slightly inhibited by increased salinity, probably because of ionic interference, the presence of humic acid had almost no effect, which means that GAB3 remains stable under natural marine conditions. Adsorption was enabled by a set of processes that involved electrostatic interactions, cation bridging, pore filling, π–π interactions, and hydrogen bonding, which were enhanced by surface charge, as shown in Fig. 5(b). These findings support the potential use of algal-biochars as green and large-scale materials for the removal of antibiotics in marine ecosystems.
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| Fig. 5 Schematic of (a) GAB synthesis and (b) NOR adsorption mechanism, reproduced from ref. 92, with permission from ELSEVIER,92 copyright 2022. | ||
Tetracycline is one of the most common antibiotics found in water ecosystems, which has been removed using activated carbon produced from Ulva prolifera via low-temperature carbonization.93 The developed adsorbent showed a rough, porous surface and a large surface area (197.53 m2 g−1), which enhanced its ability to capture tetracycline molecules from water with an adsorption capacity of 54.04 mg g−1 in a batch experiment under optimized conditions (adsorbent mass of 0.5 g L−1, pH 6, temperature of 30 °C). The isotherm data were well represented by the Langmuir and Freundlich models, while the kinetic data fitted well with the pseudo-second-order model. The adsorption was mainly a result of chemical interactions, which were supported by the surface composition of the material, showing the effectiveness of this low-cost algal-based adsorbent for antibiotic remediation. Hourcade et al. (2022) demonstrated that nitrogen-doping through melamine improved the structural and functional properties of microalgae-derived biochars drastically, which were obtained by one-step H3PO4-assisted pyrolysis of a wild microalgal mixture containing Coelastrum ssp., Desmodesmus ssp., Scenedesmus ssp., and Chlorella ssp.94 The doping treatment increased the surface area from 324 to 433 m2 g−1, microporosity, and graphitization, and nitrogen and oxygen functionalities were enriched. These changes improved the adsorption capacity for acetaminophen; the doped biochar achieved 120.7 mg g−1 compared to 101.4 mg g−1 for the non-doped biochar under optimized conditions (adsorbent mass of 2 g L−1, pH 6, and temperature of 23 °C). Filling of pores was the main adsorption mechanism. In addition, the biochars were capable of removing up to 74% of pollutants from synthetic effluents, underscoring their potential in the field of sustainable water treatment applications. Qin et al. (2023) prepared porous carbon-biochar composites (PC/PB) from Enteromorpha prolifera through pyrolysis and potassium/iron citrate-assisted activation at 800 °C, exhibiting a hierarchical pore structure with high surface area and pore volume.95 Among them, the HCl-washed A-PC/PB composite showed a high specific surface area of 1414.89 m2 g−1 and excellent adsorption performance for sulfamethoxazole, achieving a maximum capacity of 844 mg g−1. The adsorption was primarily governed by pore filling, supported by electrostatic attractions, hydrogen bonding, and π–π interactions. The sorption of the pollutant was well described by both the Freundlich and Langmuir isotherm models, while the adsorption kinetics followed the pseudo-second-order model. The reusability test confirmed the stability of the absorbent, maintaining 95.05% removal efficiency and 109.35 mg g−1 adsorption capacity even after four cycles, underscoring its potential for sustainable water remediation.
In the study by Xu et al. (2023), the composite biochar ECA-B was prepared from Enteromorpha and Chlorella vulgaris through pyrolysis and NaOH activation of the sample. It showed a very good tetracycline adsorption capacity (376.878 mg g−1) within the pH range of 3–9 at 50 °C, which was mainly attributed to intraparticle diffusion.96 The prepared material exhibited a specific surface area of 583.329 m2 g−1, and the adsorption data fitted best with pseudo-second-order kinetics and the Langmuir isotherm. After five cycles, the adsorbent still retained over 80% of its removal efficiency, which is proof of its high reusability, making it a great solution for wastewater treatment. Chen et al. (2024) synthesized nitrogen-doped magnetic porous biochars (NMPBs) from Enteromorpha prolifera via prepyrolysis, copyrolysis, and coprecipitation techniques, as shown in Fig. 4(c). These porous materials offer high surface areas up to 1531 m2 g−1, an enriched nitrogen content, and strong magnetization, exhibiting an exceptional performance for the adsorption of sulfamethoxazole through mechanisms such as hydrogen bonding, π–π interactions, pore filling, and electrostatic attractions.89 These NMPBs demonstrated a high affinity for sulfamethoxazole, achieving a maximum adsorption capacity of 502 mg g−1 and also exhibited strong magnetic separability and notable reusability, maintaining an 87% removal efficiency even after seven adsorption and desorption cycles, as shown in Fig. 4(d). Furthermore, the adsorption data was well described by the Freundlich isotherm, and the kinetics fitted both pseudo-first- and second-order models. This work highlights the potential of converting marine biowaste into functional biochars, offering sustainable routes for advanced environmental remediation applications. Sun et al. (2025) prepared a zeolite-like algal biochar using Sargassum horneri as the precursor and doping heteroatoms such as nitrogen, sulphur, oxygen, silicon, and aluminium to enhance its surface functionality and structural properties.97 The resulting material exhibited high porosity, a large number of oxygen-containing functional groups and a high surface area (1137.60 m2 g−1), enabling the efficient adsorption of CIP and TC with the maximum capacities of 352.936 and 265.385 mg g−1, respectively (at the adsorbent dosage of 0.02–0.10 g L−1, pH range of 3–11, and temperature of 20–60 °C). The adsorption behaviour was best fitted by the Freundlich isotherm and pseudo-first-order kinetics.
The adsorption occurred through various mechanisms such as hydrogen bonding, pore filling, electrostatic attraction, complexation, and π–π electron-donor–acceptor interactions, as shown in Fig. 6. These findings emphasized the strong potential of the prepared material for the removal of antibiotics from antibiotic-contaminated water. Furthermore, DFT simulation analysis was performed to clarify the adsorption mechanism of the prepared adsorbents toward CIP and TC. Electrostatic potential and frontier orbital analysis were used to find the reactive sites, while five substrates were optimized. The adsorption energies confirmed that the mechanism was chemisorption, and the prepared material showed the highest affinity for CIP (−2.19 eV) and TC (−3.31 eV). The charge density difference analysis revealed enhanced electron transfer from the synthesized material to pollutants, and the electron localization function explained the hydroxyl-driven interactions with CIP and hydrogen bonding with TC. Therefore, the synergistic changes in the adsorbent (N doping, Al substitution, and hydroxylation) significantly improved its adsorption capacity owing to charge transfer and hydrogen bonding, which is consistent with the experimental data.
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| Fig. 6 Pictorial representation of the adsorption mechanism of CIP and TC, reproduced from ref. 97, with permission from ELSEVIER,97 copyright 2025. | ||
One more study highlighted how structural defects played a major role in improving the adsorption capacity of algal biochar for the removal of ciprofloxacin.98 In this study, biochar from Ulva lactuca was prepared via high-temperature carbonization and KOH activation, which resulted in the introduction of oxygen and sulphur dopants along with carbon vacancies in the material. These structural transformations increased the interaction energy and decreased the electrostatic potential, causing pollutant adsorption to be highly efficient through hydrogen bonding, pore-filling, electrostatic attractions, and π–π electron donor–acceptor interactions. Furthermore, these modifications increased the porosity and surface area (1799.23 m2 g−1), thereby leading to a very high ciprofloxacin adsorption of 695.09 mg g−1 under optimized conditions (adsorbent dosage of 0.004 g/100 mL, pH 7, and temperature of 25 °C). The adsorption kinetics aligned well with pseudo-second-order kinetics and the Langmuir isotherm. Notably, it is worth mentioning that the biochar maintained 69.36% of its original adsorption capability after five regeneration cycles from 91.05%; hence, its performance can be considered stable, and its reusability is promising. In addition, DFT analysis was employed to determine how oxygen and sulphur doping, along with carbon vacancies, contribute to the adsorption of ciprofloxacin on biochar. Five graphene-based models were constructed, and it was found that the individual defects decreased the local electron density, whereas the inclusion of a carbon vacancy in conjunction with oxygen and sulphur doping produced the adsorption energy with the highest absolute value (−0.38 eV). In other words, the existence of several defects provides reaction sites, enhancing the charge redistribution and lowering the electrostatic potential, consequently leading to the stronger adsorption of ciprofloxacin. Overall, this study demonstrated that defect engineering through heteroatom doping and vacancy creation significantly improves the adsorption capacity of algal-derived biochar, together with its high porosity and surface area. This research outcome provides substantial knowledge about defect engineering of marine algal biochars for efficient antibiotic removal.
A recent study on hydrochars derived from a strain of microalgae local to northern Sweden through hydrothermal carbonization at 180 °C explored their capacity to remove pharmaceuticals and personal care pollutants from water.99 The adsorption behaviour of the materials prepared was enhanced by alkane/alkene and aromatic structures, which were the main factors that influenced the adsorption of hydrophobic compounds such as triclosan (58.8 mg g−1) and bisphenol A (25.8 mg g−1), whereas oxygen-containing groups promoted the adsorption of cationic molecules such as trimethoprim. Conversely, negatively charged pollutants such as diclofenac and chloramphenicol had very low adsorption, which was attributed to electrostatic repulsions. These findings emphasized the ability of hydrochar derived from Swedish microalgae to be used as adsorbents for selective contaminant removal.
Algal-based material demonstrates excellent adsorption capacities for the pharmaceutical contaminants. Furthermore, their adsorption mechanism for the removal of pharmaceutical pollutants was validated by DFT/computation simulations, which provide an understanding of adsorbent interactions with pollutants at the atomic level. In addition, their adsorption efficiency and reusability were enhanced after chemical modification and metal doping. These findings suggest the possible application of algal-derived materials as a sustainable method to mitigate pharmaceutical contaminants in wastewater and open up new opportunities in environmental detoxification.
Table 2 summarizes the reported literature (2014–2025) on algae-derived adsorbents for the removal of pharmaceutical pollutants. This table briefly presents diverse algae-derived adsorbents prepared through pyrolysis, hydrothermal carbonization, and chemical activation methods. The carbonaceous material derived from Bifurcaria bifurcata showed the highest drug adsorption capacity for aspirin (2633.04 mg g−1), while activated carbon obtained from Ulva prolifera exhibited the lowest tetracycline adsorption capacity of 54.04 mg g−1. The adsorption data follows various kinetic models and isotherm models depending on the modification technique and type of pollutant. Most of the algal-derived adsorbents exhibited pseudo-second-order kinetics, indicating chemisorption as the primary mechanism. Alternatively, advanced models such as Avrami fractional and general-order models revealed that the adsorption mechanism is complex. The majority of isotherm fittings are Langmuir, suggesting monolayer adsorption; however, the Freundlich and Liu models frequently take heterogeneity into consideration. With a constant high adsorption capacity (for example, Enteromorpha prolifera: 744–844 mg g−1 and Ulva lactuca: 695.09 mg g−1) and good reusability, pseudo-second-order kinetics with the Langmuir isotherm stands out among them the most stable combination. Using algal-derived adsorbents, these studies demonstrated that chemisorption-driven monolayer adsorption was the most effective method for removing pharmaceutical pollutants.
| Algal species used | Modification technique | Adsorbent derived from algal species | Specific surface area (m2 g−1) | Adsorbed pollutants | Adsorption capacities (mg g−1) | Optimized parameters | Adsorption kinetic models and isotherms | Reusability | Year | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blue-green microalgae | Hydrothermal carbonization | Biochar | 122.8 | Tetracycline | 95.86 | pH: 6.8 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | 96% after three cycles | 2014 | 83 |
| Adsorbent mass: 0.20 g/100 mL | ||||||||||
| Room temperature | ||||||||||
| Scenedesmus obliquus | Alkaline modification | MAB | — | Tramadol | 140.25 | pH: 7 | Pseudo-second-order kinetics and Langmuir isotherm | ∼95% after three runs | 2018 | 84 |
| Adsorbent mass: 0.5 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: not specified | ||||||||||
| Bifurcaria bifurcata | Ultrasonic-assisted pyrolysis | Carbonaceous material | 898.2 | Aspirin | 2633.04 | pH: 3.4 | Pseudo-first-order and Langmuir model | ∼95% after 10 cycles | 2019 | 85 |
| Adsorbent mass: 0.02 g/100 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 293 K | ||||||||||
| Laminaria digitata | Chemical activation | Porous carbon | 799 | Ketoprofen | 443.45 | pH: 3.4 | Avrami fractional kinetics and Liu isotherm model | 90.2% | 2019 | 86 |
| Aspirin | 970.88 | Adsorbent mass: 0.02 g/100 mL | ∼90.6% after 5 cycles | |||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Spirulina sp. | Pyrolysis | Biochar | 2.63 | Tetracycline | 132.8 | pH: 6 | Pseudo-first-order kinetic model and Langmuir isotherm | 60–65% over the first three cycles and declined to 37% in the fourth cycle | 2020 | 87 |
| Adsorbent mass: 0.005 g/50 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 293 K | ||||||||||
| Sargassum crassifolium | Pyrolysis and slurry coating | Zeolite-modified seaweed biochar | 124.359 | Ciprofloxacin | 93.65 | pH: 7 | Pseudo-second-order, Elovich, and Freundlich | — | 2021 | 88 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.5 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Enteromorpha prolifera | Potassium-hydroxide modification | Biochar | 2172.08 | Sulfamethoxazole | 744 | pH range: 5–9 | Pseudo-second-order kinetics and Freundlich and Langmuir isotherms | 94% after five cycles | 2021 | 90 |
| Adsorbent mass: 0.002 g/20 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Ascophyllum nodosum | Hydrothermal carbonization | Biochar | 49 to 1326 | Ciprofloxacin | 150–400 | pH range: 3–11 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | — | 2022 | 91 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.05 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp. range: 278–318 K | ||||||||||
| Gelidium amansii | Pyrolysis and H3PO4 activation | Biochar | 641.33 | Norfloxacin | 166.48 | pH: not specified | Pseudo-second-order kinetics and Langmuir isotherm | ∼80% even after four reuse cycles | 2022 | 92 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.5 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 723 K | ||||||||||
| Ulva prolifera | Low-temperature carbonization | Activated carbon | 197.53 | Tetracycline | 54.04 | pH: 6 | Pseudo-second-order kinetics | — | 2022 | 93 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.5 g/1000 mL | Freundlich and Langmuir isotherms | |||||||||
| Temp.: 303 K | ||||||||||
| Wild microalgal consortium (Coelastrum, Desmodesmus, Scenedesmus, Chlorella) | H3PO4-assisted pyrolysis | Biochar | 433 | Acetaminophen | 120.7 | pH: 6 | General-order and Liu isotherm | — | 2022 | 94 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 2 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 296 K | ||||||||||
| Enteromorpha prolifera | Citrate-mediated green activation process | Porous carbon/porous biochar (PC/PB) composites | 1414.89 | Sulfamethoxazole | 844 | pH: 6 | Pseudo-second-order kinetics and isotherm fitting align with both Freundlich and Langmuir isotherms | 95.05% after four cycles | 2023 | 95 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.002 g/20 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Enteromorpha and Chlorella vulgaris | Pyrolysis and NaOH activation | Biochar | 583.329 | Tetracycline | 376.878 | pH: 9 | Pseudo-second-order kinetics and Langmuir isotherm | 80% after five cycles | 2023 | 96 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.1 g/200 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 323 K | ||||||||||
| Enteromorpha prolifera | Prepyrolysis, copyrolysis, and coprecipitation | Nitrogen-doped magnetic biochar | 1531 | Sulfamethoxazole | 502 | pH: 7 | Pseudo-first and second-order kinetics and Freundlich isotherm | 87% after seven cycles | 2024 | 89 |
| Adsorbent dosage: not specified | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Sargassum horneri | Pyrolysis and chemical activation | Biochar | 1137.60 | Ciprofloxacin | 352.936 | pH range: 7 for CIP and 3 for TC | Pseudo-first-order kinetics and Freundlich isotherm | Cyclic regeneration over four cycles | 2025 | 97 |
| Tetracycline | 265.385 | Adsorbent dosage: 0.02–0.10 g/1000 mL | ||||||||
| Temp.: 293–333 K | ||||||||||
| Ulva lactuca | High-temperature carbonization and KOH activation | Biochar | 1799.23 | Ciprofloxacin | 695.09 | pH: 7 | Pseudo-second-order kinetics and Langmuir isotherm | 91.05% → 69.36% by the fifth cycle | 2025 | 98 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.004 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Microalgae | Hydrothermal carbonization | Hydrochar | 15.3 | Triclosan | 58.8 | pH: 7 | Langmuir isotherm | — | 2025 | 99 |
| Adsorbent mass: 0.05 g/50 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 293 K |
Yao et al. (2020) prepared porous biochar from wakame (Undaria pinnatifida), a brown alga, via a single-step calcination and activation technique and used it for the removal of organic dyes from aqueous environments.103 The prepared material possessed a large surface area of 1156.25 m2 g−1, as well as a mesoporous structure, and consequently it could adsorb organic dyes such as methylene blue (841.64 mg g−1), rhodamine B (533.77 mg g−1), and malachite green (4066.96 mg g−1) very efficiently. The adsorption data best fitted pseudo-second-order kinetics and the Langmuir isotherm. The surface functional groups (–CO, –OH, and –CH) of the material are very active, and they assist both physical and chemical adsorption processes, enabling effective molecular interactions and surface attachments. The entire experiment was carried out as endothermic adsorption, reinforcing the performance of this material and its capability as a low-cost absorbent for wastewater treatment applications. In another study, mesoporous biochar developed from Eucheuma cottonii seaweed was used for the efficient removal of methylene blue (MB) dye from synthetic wastewater.104 The pyrolysis-produced biochar was subsequently treated with acid, which exhibited improved surface characteristics, including a large surface area (640 m2 g−1), pore volume, and pore size, all of which contribute to its significant adsorption capacity. The maximum MB adsorption by the synthesized material was 133.33 mg g−1 when the conditions were optimized, such as specific MB concentration, pH, and temperature. The adsorption process was chemisorption controlled by monolayer formation on the biochar surface. The main factors that emphasize the possible application of this material in extensive wastewater treatment procedures are its consistent output across a variety of operational parameters and its similar performance to that of commercially available adsorbents.
In a study by Gurav et al. (2021), biochar synthesized from Eucheuma spinosum through pyrolysis showed a high adsorption capacity of 331.97 mg g−1 for reactive red 120 dye.105 The prepared material exhibited a specific surface area of 200.7454 m2 g−1, and the adsorption data were well described by pseudo-second-order kinetics and the Langmuir isotherm. The removal mechanism indicated that chemisorption was involved through monolayer coverage, and it was mainly driven by electrostatic attractions, ion exchange, metal complexation, and hydrogen bonding, which proved that it can be used as a green adsorption for dye-contaminated water. Moreover, the prepared material retained over 67% of its efficiency after five cycles; hence, it can be reused and is applicable for a long time in the future. Shaikh et al. (2022) synthesized a biochar-based silver nanocomposite (nAgBC) derived from Spirogyra sp. algal biomass, which demonstrated a high adsorption efficiency for Congo red, achieving 95.92% removal with an adsorption capacity of 34.53 mg g−1 under optimal conditions (18 mg L−1 of CR, 0.5 g L−1 of the absorbent, pH 6, 60 min, and 300 K).106 The prepared adsorbent exhibited multilayer chemisorption driven by electrostatic attraction, surface complexation, hydrogen bonding, and van der Waals forces with active groups such as NH, C
O, –OH, SO, and CH, facilitating CR binding, as shown in Fig. 7(a). Reusability tests were also performed, and the results showed that the reuse of this material is feasible. The dye removal efficiency decreased from <8% in the first two cycles to ∼70% by the fifth cycle, which is a great indication of its applications in industrial wastewater treatment.
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| Fig. 7 Schematic of (a) CR adsorption via mesoporous nAgBC, (b) dye adsorption mechanism through surface functional groups, and (c) efficiency of regeneration across cycles, reproduced from ref. 106 and 109, with permission from ELSEVIER,106,109 copyright 2022 and 2023. | ||
The research by Wang et al. (2022) documented the synthesis of activated carbon from algal bloom biomass, which resulted in a long-lasting and economically attractive adsorbent for the highly efficient removal of dye pollutants from aqueous media.107 The resulting material showed a remarkable surface area (2169 m2 g−1) and adsorption capacity for rhodamine B (1101 ± 11 mg g−1), which is much higher than that of rape straw carbon prepared in the laboratory (176 ± 5 mg g−1) and commercial activated carbon (489 ± 5 mg g−1). The adsorption was driven by both physical and chemical interactions. Physisorption was the dominant adsorption mechanism; however, a minor chemisorption was also present due to π–π interactions and hydrogen bonding between the dye molecule and surface functional groups. The biomass resulting from the pyrolysis of the algal bloom showed flexibility in a wide range of pH and temperature conditions and was able to extract various dyes from natural waters. Therefore, it is necessary to verify its scalability and sustainability for in situ wastewater remediation.
In another experiment, the performance of biochar modified with Fe3O4 was improved to remove methylene blue (MB) as a representative cationic pollutant from water by using biochar prepared from Ulva fasciata algae.108 The raw and Fe3O4-integrated biochar revealed very different adsorption capacities of 20.83 and 50.12 mg g−1, respectively, with the magnetic sample being able to adsorb more than twice the amount of MB under alkaline conditions and moderate temperature. This enhancement was mainly associated with the more accessible surface area and pore structure brought about by the magnetic modification. The adsorption process was essentially a result of physical interactions, such as pore accommodation and charged-based attractions. However, the process showed reduced spontaneity and molecular disorder besides being thermally favourable. Significantly, the produced biochar revealed great reusability as it maintained 89% removal efficiency over five regeneration cycles, highlighting its practical potential for dye-contaminated water treatment and sustainable pollutant management.
Jafarian et al. (2023) synthesized activated biochar from Sargassum macro-algae via pyrolysis and CO2 activation, which showed outstanding adsorption capacities of 500 mg g−1 for malachite green and 204.8 mg g−1 for methylene blue at pH 7 and temperature of 25 °C.109 The adsorption data fitted well with pseudo-second-order kinetics and the Langmuir isotherm. The prepared adsorbent is very porous and has a large surface area (841 m2 g−1), and is highly efficient in removing malachite green (MG) and methylene blue (MB) dyes from water. Density functional theory simulations revealed that the dye molecules strongly interacted with the functional groups on the adsorbent surface, such as –COONH2 and –COOH, which resulted in an increase in adsorption affinity, as shown in Fig. 7(b). After five consecutive regeneration cycles, it was interesting to note that the material still maintained more than 85% removal efficiency for MB and 75% for MG, proving its eco-friendly application for the treatment of dye-contaminated water, as shown in Fig. 7(c). However, in another study, DFT calculations verified a similar mechanism between the biochar-based adsorbent and MB dye.110,111 This work showed that the main interactions were primarily governed by functional groups, with the –COOH moieties of the adsorbent forming specific associations with the R–N(CH3)2 groups of MB. Both studies emphasized that electrostatic interactions, as well as H-bonding interactions, contribute to the adsorption of MB dye. In another investigation, hydrochars obtained via the hydrothermal carbonization of Sargassum muticum at 180 °C, 240 °C, and 300 °C for 60 min were tested for their capacity to adsorb rhodamine B from aqueous solutions.112 The sample heated at 240 °C (SM2) was found to have the highest adsorption capacity of 20.77 mg g−1. The samples heated at 300 °C (SM3) and 180 °C (SM1) had adsorption capacities of 17.69 mg g−1 and 17.29 mg g−1, respectively. Under optimized conditions, SM2 was able to remove 98% of the target within 30 min at 45 °C.
The adsorption process was basically controlled by the chemical interactions of the dye molecules with the active functional groups on the hydrochar surface, which aligns with the use of temperature-treated algal-derived adsorbents as a reliable method for pollutant remediation. Another study also showed the effectiveness of a biochar-sulphur composite material prepared from Ulva lactuca, which was chemically modified with H2SO4 and NaHCO3, for the removal of methylene blue (MB) dye from water.113 The high equilibrium adsorption capacity of the adsorbent was recorded as 303.78 mg g−1, which was basically due to its porous structure and the presence of active surface sites that facilitated both physical and chemical interactions, under optimized experimental conditions with a material dosage of 0.5 g L−1 and an initial MB concentration of 200 mg L−1. The adsorbent maintained 89.65% of its adsorption capacity for up to six cycles, which shows that it had strong affinity and was very effective in binding dye pollutants in aqueous solutions. In a different investigation, Sargassum (brown seaweed), a coastal brown macroalga, was transformed into ultra-porous carbonaceous adsorbents by hydrothermal carbonization (180–260 °C) followed by KOH activation, enabling the efficient removal of methylene blue (MB) dye from wastewater.114 The prepared adsorbent showed outstanding physicochemical characteristics, such as a high carbon content, thermal stability, and a broad porosity range with a large surface area ranging from 1216.92–1404.09 m2 g−1. These structural characteristics, with abundant surface oxygenated acidic groups, made it possible for this material to adsorb methylene blue efficiently with adsorption capacities of 641.03 mg g−1 at room temperature and 714.29 mg g−1 at a higher temperature (37 °C). The adsorption benefited significantly from a prolonged contact time, alkaline pH, and thermal treatment, indicating temperature-favoured uptake. Pore filling and electrostatic interactions between the dye molecules and the functionalized carbon surface governed the elimination of MB mechanistically. Its ability to selectively bind to MB even in the presence of other dyes, such as methyl orange, demonstrated the potential of this material as an absorbent for targeted pollutant removal in complex wastewater treatment processes. Another study revealed that after the conversion of phycocyanin-extracted algal bloom residues (PE-ABR) into hydrochar via hydrothermal carbonization, the hydrochar exhibited a strong adsorption capacity of 89.05 mg g−1 for malachite green dye, which is superior to the capacity of unprocessed ABR-derived hydrochar (43.11 mg g−1).115 The improved adsorption was mostly due to the binding of malachite green molecules with the surface functional groups of the hydrochar, which provides a sustainable and low-energy strategy for the treatment of dye-contaminated wastewater.
Another work presented a groundbreaking strategy for dye removal by creating an algal-based magnetic biochar nanocomposite made from Ulva fasciata via carbonization and magnetization, aimed directly at the adsorption of Azocarmine G2 (ACG2), a toxic azo dye.116 The synthesized material possessed a surface area of 51.92 m2 g−1 and efficient adsorption capacity (71.3 mg g−1) for ACG2 at pH 1. The adsorption was a result of electrostatic attractions that occurred under acidic conditions, pore-filling in its pore structure, and stabilizing interactions such as π–π electron donor–acceptor attractions, and hydrogen bonding, allowing the dye to be effectively retained on its heterogeneous surface. After five regeneration cycles, the synthesized nanocomposite maintained more than 80% of its adsorption capacity, demonstrating its structural stability and reusability. It also maintained over 90% dye removal effectiveness. These results indicate the potential of this material to be used as a green and efficient adsorbent in real wastewater treatment processes. Recently, a study was carried out on biomass of sargaço gathered from the coastlines of Portuguese, in which it was shown that thermal treatment at 400 °C and subsequent ball milling resulted in the production of a very effective biochar for the removal of methylene blue dye.117 The prepared biochar showed the maximum adsorption of 500 mg g−1, which is not only higher than that of conventional biomass-derived adsorbents but also effectively exhibits π–π interactions, hydrogen bonding, and ion exchange to be the most efficient under alkaline and high-temperature conditions. Research proposed the concept of using invasive macroalgae as a source of new, scalable, environmentally friendly materials for industrial wastewater treatment. In a recent study, hydrochar was prepared from Spirogyra sp. algae via hydrothermal carbonization to improve its adsorption performance for anionic dyes.118 The prepared material exhibited an increased selectivity for direct yellow dye, resulting in 62.07% removal efficiency with a maximum adsorption capacity of 95.24 mg g−1 at pH 6. The adsorption process was a naturally occurring one, endothermic, and it was mainly due to the interactions on the surface and the enhanced structural properties. This material also showed excellent reusability, retaining 67.11% efficiency after four cycles, indicating that it can be a stable and environmentally friendly material for the treatment of dye-contaminated water in the future.
Overall, algal transformation into biochar, activated carbon, and hydrochar has proven to be prominent for the removal of dye pollutants from the aquatic environment through various interactions such as H-bonding, electrostatic interactions, and surface complexation. Moreover, chemical modifications and the addition of nanomaterials enhance the efficacy of these materials. These algal-derived materials are promising for the elimination of organic pollutants because of their high biosorption capabilities and reusability.
Table 3 summarizes the reported literature (2016–2025) on algae-derived adsorbents for dye removal. Ulothrix zonata- and Undaria pinnatifida-derived biochar showed exceptionally high adsorption capacities of 5306.2 and 4066.96 mg g−1, respectively, for malachite green dye, outperforming most other algal derived adsorbents. Conversely, hydrochar derived from Sargassum muticum demonstrated the lowest adsorption capacity of 20.77 mg g−1 for rhodamine B, showing structural limitations compared to biochar. Most studies investigated methylene blue (MB) adsorption in the basic pH range (pH range: 7–12). Because MB is a cationic dye, at low pH, only H+ ions are present, which facilitate electrostatic repulsion between MB and the positively charged adsorbent surface, hindering adsorption. In contrast, at high pH, deprotonation of surface functional groups generates negatively charged sites, which promote electrostatic interactions and significantly enhance MB uptake. In general, pyrolysis and chemical activation effectively produce high-quality adsorbents due to their high porosity, enhanced surface area, adsorption capacities, and functional groups. Also, both magnetic enhancement and composite modification enhanced the aspect of reusability and pollutant selectivity through adsorption capacities. Most of the adsorbents were effective in removing a diverse range of dyes, and chemisorption was the predominant mechanism, as indicated by pseudo-second-order kinetics. The Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms are the most reported ones, with Langmuir best fitting monolayer adsorption. Several algae-derived materials and composites retain 75–89% adsorption efficiency after multiple cycles, highlighting their practical applications. In the earlier works (2016–2018), the focus was on basic pyrolysis with moderate capacities, whereas the latest studies (2022–2025) emphasize advanced modifications, including doping, magnetization, and composite fabrication for higher adsorption capacities and reusability.
| Algal species used | Modification techniques | Prepared adsorbent | Specific surface area (m2 g−1) | Adsorbed pollutant | Adsorption capacities (mg g−1) | Optimized parameters | Adsorption kinetic models and isotherms | Reusability | Year | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spirulina platensis | Thermal activation | Biochar | 167 | Congo red | 51.28 | pH: 2 | Freundlich isotherm | — | 2016 | 100 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.2 g/100 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 303 K | ||||||||||
| Kelp | Thermal carbonization and solvothermal synthesis | Biochar | 507.177 | Methylene blue | 324.1 | pH: not specified | Pseudo-second-order | — | 2018 | 101 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.01 g/50 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: not specified | ||||||||||
| Ulothrix zonata | Pyrolysis | Biochar | 133.2 | Malachite green | 5306.2 | pH: 10 | Pseudo-second-order and Freundlich isotherm | — | 2018 | 102 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.005 g/10 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Undaria pinnatifida | Calcination | Biochar | 1156.25 | Methylene blue (MB) | 841.64 | pH: 12 (MB), 12 (RhB), 7 (MG) | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | — | 2020 | 103 |
| Rhodamine B (RhB) | 533.77 | Adsorbent dosage: 0.01 g/50 mL | ||||||||
| Malachite green (MG) | 4066.96 | Temp.: 323 K | ||||||||
| Eucheuma cottonii | Pyrolysis with acid treatment | Biochar | 640 | Methylene blue | 133.33 | pH: 4 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | — | 2020 | 104 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 300 mg/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 348 K | ||||||||||
| Eucheuma spinosum | Pyrolysis | Biochar | 200.7454 | Red 120 dye | 331.97 | pH: 3 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | Retained 67% after five cycles | 2021 | 105 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.025 g/100 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 313 K | ||||||||||
| Spirogyra sp. | Mild-thermal pyrolysis and co-precipitation method | Ag-biochar nanocomposite | 8.77 | Congo red | 34.53 | pH: 6 | Pseudo-second-order and Freundlich isotherm | ∼75% by the fifth cycle | 2022 | 106 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.5 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 300 K | ||||||||||
| Algal bloom | Pyrolysis | Activated carbon | 2169 | Rhodamine B | 1101 ± 11 | pH: 10.80 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | — | 2022 | 107 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.1 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 323.15 K | ||||||||||
| Ulva fasciata | Pyrolysis and magnetic enhancement using ferrous and ferric solutions | Magnetic-biochar | 34.5466 | Methylene blue | 50.12 | pH: 9 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | 89% over five cycles | 2023 | 108 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 2 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Sargassum | Pyrolysis and CO2 activation | Activated biochar | 841 | Malachite green | 500 | pH: 7 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | 75% after five cycles | 2023 | 109 |
| Methylene blue | 204.8 | Adsorbent dosage: 0.002 g/5 mL | 85% after five cycles | |||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Sargassum muticum | Hydrothermal carbonization | Hydrochar | 60.86 | Rhodamine B | 20.77 | pH: not specified | Pseudo-second-order | — | 2023 | 112 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 30 mg/50 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 513 K | ||||||||||
| Ulva lactuca | Chemical modification | Biochar-sulphur composite | 6.26 | Methylene blue | 303.78 | pH: 12 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | 89.65 up to six cycles | 2024 | 113 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.5 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Sargassum | Hydrothermal carbonization followed by chemical activation | Hydrochar | 1404.09 | Methylene blue | 714.29 | pH: 12 | Elovich model and Langmuir isotherm | — | 2024 | 114 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 1 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 310 K | ||||||||||
| Ulva fasciata | Carbonization and magnetization | Magnetic biochar nanocomposite | 51.92 | Azocarmine G2 | 71.3 | pH: 1 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | More than 80% after five cycles | 2025 | 116 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 2.5 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Sargaço | Carbonization followed by ball milling | Biochar | — | Methylene blue | 500 | pH: 12.6 | Langmuir isotherm | — | 2025 | 117 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 2 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 313 K | ||||||||||
| Spirogyra sp. | Hydrothermal carbonization | Hydrochar | 5.369 | Direct yellow | 95.24 | pH: 6 | Pseudo-second-order and Freundlich isotherm | 67.11% after four cycles | 2025 | 118 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.02 g/20 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 313 K |
In another study, a magnetic biochar/sulfidated Fe0 composite (S-Fe0/BC) was prepared through a green one-step method using Ulva prolifera.123 In this process, the composite managed to remove 88% removal of tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA), governed by chemical adsorption, reductive debromination, and electron transfer. This material possessed a surface area of 47.2 m2 g−1 and a stable performance with a capacity of 1.47 mg g−1, retaining more than 1.17 mg g−1 after six regeneration cycles. Furthermore, the adsorption data aligned well with pseudo-second-order kinetics and the Freundlich isotherm. Vinayagam et al. (2023) reported further improvements in this area by developing a magnetic biochar composite (UPAC–Fe2O3) through chemical activation, thermal carbonization, and in situ co-precipitation of ferric oxide onto Ulva prolifera-based activated carbon, which effectively removed the herbicide 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) from water through surface-mediated interactions.124 Its mesoporous structure and large surface area (292.51 m2 g−1) supported pollutant adsorption through mechanisms such as hydrogen bonding, electrostatic attraction, and chemical affinity between functional groups and the herbicide molecules. The composite achieved an adsorption capacity of 60.61 mg g−1, demonstrating its feasibility for removing organic pollutants from water. In addition, pseudo-second-order kinetics and the Langmuir isotherm best fitted the adsorption data.
Song et al. (2024) developed nitrogen-enriched porous biochars (NPB) through co-pyrolysis of Enteromorpha prolifera (E-NPB), Ulva lactuca (U-NPB), and oyster shell, which showed a high surface area of 1501.80 m2 g−1 for E-NPB and 1067.18 m2 g−1 for U-NPB and significant pore volumes, resulting in the efficient adsorption of atrazine (312.06 and 340.52 mg g−1), respectively.125 Hydrogen-bonding, pore filling, π–π interactions, and electrostatic interactions controlled the multilayer sorption process. It is worthwhile noting that the biochars still maintained significant adsorption capacities (246.13 and 255.97 mg g−1, respectively) after they were reused twice, which indicated their possible applications as green materials for water purification using algal-derived adsorbents. Moreover, the adsorption data best fitted pseudo-second-order kinetics and the Freundlich isotherm. Yu et al. (2022) prepared iron-modified biochar from Aegagropila linnaei, and showed that the bisphenol A removal efficiency of 69.8% ± 2.3% at pH 3, which was attributed to the high surface area (144.62 m2 g−1), increased porosity, and electron conductivity of this material.126 The surface interactions and reactive oxygen species generated by nano-Fe3O4 under acidic conditions mainly controlled the adsorption, providing a cheap and environmentally friendly way to help reduce bisphenol-A contamination in water bodies.
In our opinion, the use of algae-derived adsorbents provides a green and flexible approach for the elimination of organic pollutants. Their adsorption capacity, stability, and reusability were consistently improved by modifying their structural using various methods, metal doping, and material combinations. These materials are quite successful and may be employed in large-scale water cleanup operations, even if their adsorption mechanism varies throughout the literature. We believe that their environmentally friendly nature positions them as promising materials for next-generation water treatment technologies.
Table 4 highlights the use of adsorbents produced from algae for the removal of agrochemicals. Early pyrolysis/hydrothermal carbons had modest surface areas and moderate capacities, but more recent doped/activated biochars obtained specific surface areas greater than 1500 m2 g−1 and adsorption capacities of more than 300 mg g−1. Algal adsorbents vary greatly, and they are dominated by pseudo-second-order kinetics with the Freundlich/Langmuir isotherms. In subsequent research, their reusability increased, demonstrating the enhanced efficiency, pollutant selectivity, and potential for sustained regeneration of doped biochars.
| Algal species used | Synthesis techniques | Prepared adsorbent | Specific surface area (m2 g−1) | Adsorbed pollutant | Adsorption capacities (mg g−1) | Optimized parameters | Adsorption kinetic models and isotherms | Reusability | Year | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chlorella sp. Cha-01 | Pyrolysis | Biochar | 6.163 | p-Nitrophenol | 204.8 | pH: 11 | Pseudo-second-order and Freundlich isotherm | — | 2017 | 119 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.02 g/20 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 303.15 K | ||||||||||
| Ulva prolifera | Rapid hydrothermal carbonization | N-doped biochar | 25.43 | Bisphenol A | 84.19 under elevated temperature | pH: 7–10 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | — | 2017 | 120 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 10 mg/10 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 318 K | ||||||||||
| Harmful algal bloom biomass | Carbonization and activation | Porous carbon | 430 | Phenol | 52 | pH: 5 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir isotherm | — | 2019 | 121 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.015 g/15 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: room temperature | ||||||||||
| Enteromorpha prolifera | Co-carbonization with FeCl3 and ZnCl2 | Biochar | 57 | Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons | 90 for naphthalene | pH: 6 | Pseudo-second-order, intra particle diffusion and Freundlich isotherm | ∼97% after five cycles | 2020 | 122 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.001 g/20 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Ulva prolifera | Hydrothermal and sulfidation | Biochar | 47.2 | Tetrabromobisphenol A | 1.47 | pH: 4 | Pseudo-second-order and Freundlich isotherm | Retained over 1.17 mg g−1 after six regeneration cycles | 2020 | 123 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.6 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 308 | ||||||||||
| Ulva prolifera | Chemical activation, thermal carbonization, and co-precipitation | Activate carbon | 292.51 | Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid | 60.61 | pH: 2 | Pseudo-second-order and Langmuir | — | 2023 | 124 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 2 g/1000 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 303 K | ||||||||||
| Enteromorpha prolifera, Ulva lactuca | Co-pyrolysis | Nitrogen-doped biochars | 1501.80 for (E-NPB) and 1067.18 for (U-NPB) | Atrazine | 312.06 for (E-NPB) | pH range: 6–7 | Pseudo-second-order and Freundlich isotherm | Retained 246.13 mg g−1 for (E-NPB), 255.97 mg g−1 for U-NPB | 2024 | 125 |
| 340.52 for U-NPB | Adsorbent dosage: 0.001 g/20 mL | |||||||||
| Temp.: 298 K | ||||||||||
| Microalgae | Hydrothermal carbonization | Hydrochar | 15.3 | Bisphenol A | 25.8 | pH: 7 | Langmuir isotherm | — | 2025 | 99 |
| Adsorbent dosage: 0.05 g/50 mL | ||||||||||
| Temp.: 293 K |
Adsorption efficiency depends on factors such as contaminant solubility, charge interactions, solution pH, temperature, ionic strength, contact time, and mixing intensity, which determine the form of pollutants in water, their interactions with the adsorbent surface, and molecular movements, ultimately deciding the adsorption process.130–133 For example the removal efficiency of methyl orange is influenced by pH, concentration, and contact time, with the optimal adsorption observed at pH 6, 220 ppm, and 180 min, where physically activated carbon demonstrated the highest removal capacity (∼99%), outperforming raw algae and chemically activated and commercial carbons, highlighting its excellent surface properties and interaction capabilities under controlled conditions.134 Similarly, Spirulina-derived activated carbon showed high adsorption capacities of 660.5 mg g−1 for metoprolol and 588.9 mg g−1 for diclofenac at 25 °C and pH 5.0 ± 1.0, in addition to removing over 88% of 17 out of 20 micropollutants spiked at 100 µg L−1 in complex wastewater.135 In a different investigation, it was reported that the adsorption efficiency of Spirulina platensis and commercial activated carbon for reactive red 120 dye was primarily affected by pH, contact time, and temperature.136 The highest adsorption was observed at pH 2 and temperature of 298 K, where the protonation of surface functional groups enhanced the electrostatic interactions with the anionic dye species. A longer contact time made it possible for the dye molecules and the active sites to interact; thus, equilibrium was attained, and the total adsorption capacity was increased. These results support the adaptability and efficacy of designed bio-based adsorbents across several contaminant classes by showing that the intensity of contact and the uptake dynamics are determined by pH-dependent speciation, pollutant concentration, and ambient conditions. Developing adsorbents that are effective, selective, and eco-friendly requires a thorough grasp of the adsorption principles, adsorption influencing parameters, and performance metrics. This will enable the removal of contaminants from water systems at a reduced cost. The impact factors are shown schematically in Fig. 8.
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| Fig. 8 Environmental factors, including (a) kinetic adsorption model for Cd(II) and As(III), reproduced from ref. 129, with permission from ELSEVIER,129 copyright 2023. (b) Influence of pH, reproduced from ref. 131, with permission from Taylor & Francis,131 copyright 2026. (c) Influence of pH, reproduced from ref. 132, with permission from ELSEVIER,132 copyright 2024. (d) Interaction effects of various factors, reproduced from ref. 129, with permission from ELSEVIER,129 copyright 2023 and (e) influence of calcination temperature, reproduced from ref. 131, with permission from Taylor & Francis,131 copyright 2026. | ||
Regardless of their impressive regeneration performance, as discussed in Tables 2 and 3, stability over a long period of time under changing environmental conditions and the fate of residual contaminants are aspects that need to be clarified further. Future studies should focus on optimizing regeneration processes and toxicological evaluation of desorption so that reusing or throwing away can be carried out without any risk. A schematic diagram of regeneration and reusability is shown in Fig. 9.
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| Fig. 9 Schematic of regeneration and reusability, including (a) reuse of spent adsorbents, reproduced from ref. 138, with permission from ELSEVIER,138 copyright 2022. (b) Schematic of the regeneration procedure, reproduced from ref. 137, with permission from ELSEVIER,137 copyright 2019. (c) Schematic of carbon neutral nature, reproduced from ref. 141, with permission from ELSEVIER,141 copyright 2020. | ||
Wang et al. (2023) documented the potential of algae-based adsorbents in removing tetracycline.143 They showed that co-pyrolysis of Enteromorpha (EN) and Chlorella vulgaris (CV) at 500 °C and a 2
:
8 ratio, and NaOH activation at 800 °C achieved a removal efficiency of 97.56%. Further LCA using open LCA showed that the production of the EN-based adsorbent had the least environmental impact, mainly because its ocean cultivation requires significantly less freshwater compared to the freshwater-intensive cultivation of CV. Moreover, sensitivity analysis illustrated that the reuse of wastewater instead of aquaculture water could drastically lower the environmental load of the mixed algae systems, thus making them more eco-friendly. These results highlighted that even though adsorbents derived from algae are very potent, the carbon footprints of these materials are heavily dependent on their mode of cultivation, therefore providing a road map for the future preparation and applications of these materials.
Extending this sustainability perspective beyond pollutant removal, the contribution to the environment becomes even more significant when considering that algae is a carbon-neutral source. They can be grown on non-arable land or in nutrient-rich wastewater, enabling simultaneous nutrient recovery and carbon-dioxide sequestration during their growth. In this respect, microalgae, especially through their high photosynthetic efficiency, which is 40–50% higher than that of terrestrial plants, and their ability to capture 1.83 kg of CO2 per kilogram of biomass, significantly contribute to environmental remediation.141,144,145 They complete the nitrogen and phosphorus uptake as well and serve as bioindicators, supporting aquatic monitoring and the generation of valuable biomass. After the biomass is harvested, its conversion into hydrochar, biochar, and activated carbon allows for waste valorization and the lowering of the use of fossil-based adsorbents, therefore promoting the principles of a circular economy in eco-friendly pollutant management.59
However, additional adjustments are required to properly deal with energy and post-treatment costs. Accordingly, this research focuses on the adsorption properties and the post-treatment conversion of algae-based materials, evaluates their removal efficiency, and their general applicability as a means of developing environmentally friendly wastewater treatment methods. A schematic diagram of the environmental economics analysis is shown in Fig. 10.
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| Fig. 10 Environmental economics analysis, including (a) breakdown of average cost per material group and (b) declining curves depicting cost as a function of the availability of various materials. Each of the materials (M1, M2, M3, and M4) represents a different level of cost, reproduced from ref. 138, with permission from ELSEVIER,138 copyright 2022. | ||
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