Soil Pollution and Its Interrelation with Interfacial Chemistry

dc.contributor.authorOmo-Okoro. P.
dc.contributor.authorOfori. P.
dc.contributor.authorAmalapridman. V.
dc.contributor.authoret al.
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-13T11:48:21Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.descriptionResearch Article
dc.description.abstractThis review offers an in-depth analysis of soil contamination, discussing the origins, impacts, and remediation strategies, as well as the complex connections with inter facial chemistry. Interfacial chemistry plays a critical role in addressing soil contamination by governing the interactions between pollutants, soil particles, water, and remediation agents at phase boundaries (solid–liquid, solid–gas). Some key aspects include adsorp tion/desorption that controls pollutants binding to soil surfaces; chemical transformation which facilitates redox, hydrolysis, or catalytic reactions at interfaces to degrade contami nants; colloidal transport that affects the movement of nanoparticle-bound contaminants through soil pores; and techniques like soil washing, phytoremediation and permeable reactive barriers that can neutralize soil pollutants. The combination of interfacial chemistry and soil remediation techniques offers rich opportunities for improving predictive models of contaminant fate. Such approaches represent a paradigm shift from equilibrium-based remediation to dynamic process management. The review demonstrates how heterogeneous interfaces and molecular-scale dynamics dictate contaminant behavior. Furthermore, in addition to consolidating existing knowledge, the review also pioneers new directions by revealing how interfacial processes can optimize soil decontamination, offering actionable insights for researchers and policy makers. By understanding and manipulating interfacial chemical processes, scientists can develop more precise and sustainable cleanup methods.
dc.identifier.citationOmo-Okoro,P.;Ofori,P.; Amalapridman,V.;Dadrasnia,A.; Abbey,L.; Emenike,C.SoilPollution andIts Interrelation with Interfacial Chemistry. Molecules 2025, 30, 2636.
dc.identifier.otherhttps://doi.org/10.3390/ molecules30122636
dc.identifier.urihttps://ugspace.ug.edu.gh/handle/123456789/43649
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherMolecules
dc.subjectsoil pollution
dc.subjectinterfacial chemistry
dc.subjectsoil treatment
dc.titleSoil Pollution and Its Interrelation with Interfacial Chemistry
dc.typeArticle

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