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Browsing Research Articles by Author "Adeeyo, Adeyemi"
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Item Application of Magnetic Surfactants in Nanoparticle Fabrication(ACS Publication, 2023-08-28) Ademola, Ebenezer; Oyetade, Joshua; Adeeyo, AdeyemiMagnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) are a group of nanoparticles made from a magnetic material such as iron, chromium, manganese, cobalt or nickel and a chemical component that exhibit superparamagnetic properties. They have a wide range of applications in medicine, wastewater treatment and bioremediation, food industries, and molecular biology, among others, due to their size effects, surface-to-volume ratio, interaction, magnetic separation, specificity, and surface chemistry. However, the incorporation of amphiphilic surface active agents called surfactants into MNPs to serve as capping, structure-directing, ion-exchange, oxidation, and reduction agents is known to affect MNPs physicochemical properties including size, shape, dispersability, stability, surface charge, biocompatibility, optical properties, thermal properties, selectivity, cellular uptake, magnetic energy, functionality, and applicability. Thereby increasing their applications in drug delivery, cancer therapy, biosensors, diagnostic testing, bioimaging, water treatment, enhanced oil recovery, catalysis, energy storage, and information storage. This chapter addresses the mechanisms of synthesis of Magnetic Surfactant Nanoparticles (MSNPs), the roles of surfactants in MNPs fabrication, the influence of surfactants on the properties of MNPs, comparative performances and applications of MSNPs, cost analysis and future prospects, and likely challenges.Item Performance of a Wild Sesame (Sesamum Spp) Phytochemical Extract for Water Disinfection(Springer, 2025-01-14) Adeeyo, Adeyemi; Oyetade, Joshua; Msagati, Titus; Colile, Nkosi; Makungo, RachelThe study sampled wild Sesame from open field in South Africa. The samples were pretreated while the extracts were screened for phytochemical compositions and applied for water purification using standard procedures. The physicochemical properties of sampled raw and purified water (pH, total dissolved solids, salinity turbidity and conductivity) were analyzed in situ before and after treatment in the lab, respectively. The plant’s phytochemical extract from the leaves and stem was prepared using selected solvents (methanol, cold water and warm water). The results revealed the presence of phytochemicals including tannins, phenols, flavonoids, steroids, anthraquinone, terpenoids, saponins, and phlobatannins in both the stem and leaf of the wild Sesame plant. The study shows effective percentage reduction of E. coli and total bacteria with extracts of leaf (98.5, 100.0 and 97.2%), (98.8, 100.0 and 95.0%) and stem (94.0, 95.4 and 99.0%), (99.4, 98.6 and 98.4%) using methanol, cold and warm water, respectively, at 5ml of the phytochemical extracts. This study explores the use of wild Sesame phytochemicals for disinfecting river and stream water samples, highlighting the potential for greener and sustainable water treatment. The physicochemical parameters of the treated water were within tolerable limits, especially salinity and the total dissolved solids. Thus, the extract is presented as a potential solution for water purification, aligning with SDG goals 6 (clean water), 9, and 12 (green innovations). It fills the knowledge and product gap in water treatment, causing minimal harm, consistent with the African Union's sustainable development agenda and the African Council on Water's goal for clean water. This innovation meets the criteria for technology readiness levels 2 and 3, making it ready for further development.Item Recovery of precious metals from processed wastewater: conventional techniques nexus advanced and pragmatic alternatives(IWA Publishing, 2023-06-01) Adeeyo, Adeyemi; Bello, Olugbenga; Agboola, Oluwatobi; Adeeyo, Rebecca; Oyetade, Joshua; Alabi, Mercy; Edokpayi, Joshua; Makungo, RachelThe loss of highly sought-after metals such as gold, silver, and platinum during extraction processes not only constitutes a significant waste of valuable resources but also contributes to alarming environmental pollution. The ever-growing adverse impacts of these highly valued metals significantly increase the contamination of water bodies on discharge, while reducing the reusability potential of their corresponding processed wastewater. It is, therefore, of great interest to identify pragmatic solutions for the recovery of precious materials from processed water. In this review, pollution from targeted precious metals such as gold, silver, platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, and rhodium was reviewed and analyzed. Also, the hazardous effects are elicited, and detection techniques are enumerated. An insightful approach to more recent treatment techniques was also discussed. The study reveals nano- and bio-sorption techniques as adoptable pragmatic alternatives, among other techniques, especially for industrial applications with merits of cost, time, waste management, and eco-friendliness. The results indicate that gold (46.2%), palladium (23.1%), platinum (19.2%), and silver (11.5%) are of utmost interest when considering recent recovery techniques. High yield and cost analysis reduction are reasons for the observed preference of this recovery process when considering groups of precious metals. The challenges and prospects of nanomaterials are highlighted.Item Tuning water chemistry for the recovery of greener products: pragmatic and sustainable approaches(Royal Sociaty of Chemistry, 2023-02-17) Adeeyo, Adeyemi; Oyetade, Joshua; Adeeyo, Rebecca; Samie, A; Makungo, R.The early techniques for recovery of bioactive metabolites involve conventional cold or hot solvent extraction.1 The choice is a function of the nature of the bioactive compound of interest.2 The adverse effect of organic solvents (Table 1) which are mostly preferred extraction techniques has warranted the search for greener alternatives. One of the ways green extrac tions is described involves the isolation of medicinally active portions from a bio-material,3 with the simultaneous use of eco friendly solvents and optimal use of energy.4–9 Prospecting for green solvents has brought water to the fore of extraction technology.10 Water is affirmatively described as the “greenest solvent” imaginable, with its availability at the required purity, it is cost-effective, readily recycled, non-toxic, non-ammable, and eco-friendly.10–13 Based on the green chemistry precept, water is considered a green chemical per excellence.14–16 Water is useful in the recovery of various phytochemicals including alcohols, sugars, proteins, and organic acids with natural water soluble properties.12,16–21 However, water as a solvent has some physical and chemical property disadvantages when compared to organic solvent.21–23 The polar nature of water in its natural form reduces its efficacy and acceptability when compared with organic solvents for some kinds of extractions. Organic solvents are extensively desirable since they exhibit better recovery than water at ambient conditions.3 Further setbacks experienced when using conventional hydro-extraction include time and energy consumption, thermal decomposition of thermo sensitive metabolites and low recovery of hydro-solvent in its natural form. There exists the need to investigate water properties that can be improved to complement its natural advantage and eradicate its attendant limitations as a solvent for extraction.5,8,10,28,29 have indicated that improving traditional extraction must entail decreased energy input, sustainability and a non-toxic nal product. Improving water to own variable chemistry will aid the extraction of a broad range of polar and non-polar biomolecules from sustainable natural products with non-toxic quality and eco-friendliness.10,21,29 This approach will prevent the use of organic solvents, fossil energy, chemical waste and risks of extraction. It is known that water existing in its tunable form satises the conditions of green solvents.11–13 Recently, theItem Valorization of invasive sickle bush plant (Dichrostachys cinerea L.) and evaluation of its water treatment potentials(Elsevier Inc., 2025-08-16) Adeeyo, Adeyemi; Makungo, Rachel; Mothapo, Eva; Oyetade, Joshua; Msagati, TitusThe study investigates the valorization of invasive plant (Dichrostachys cinerea L.), using its calcinated product (550 oC for 5 h) as a treatment and disinfection agent, especially for E. coli and total coliform count in water samples. The methods compare the use of the derived ash and potash alum in their pristine form and when combined using a dosage range of 0.01g-0.05 g at 0, 6 hrs and 24 hrs treatment time for 100 mL of respective water samples. The treatment with the volarized product resulted in a pH range of 8.03–9.07, which is in tandem with the limits set by the regulatory bodies for drinking water. The conductivity of the treated water increased with increased dosage and treatment time. The highest reported values were 564.00, 567.00, 569.00 µS/cm for the upper stream of Pond and 577.00, 585.00, 592.00 µS/cm for the lower stream of the Pond, although within the set limit for drinking water (1700 mS/cm). Salinity and Total dissolved solids (TDS) were in a similar manner at the respective sampling points. The blended product presents a greener alternative to synthetic alum and showed excellent antimicrobial potential, with a 100 % reduction efficiency, especially using a 0.03 and 0.05 g dosage for 24 hrs.