Chitosan Beads for Heavy Metal Water Cleanup

Chitosan Beads for Heavy Metal Water Cleanup

ISEF Category: Chemistry

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Subcategory: Environmental Chemistry  ·  Difficulty: Intermediate  ·  Setup: School Lab  ·  Time: 1 to 2 Months

The Hook

Heavy metals can slip through water systems even when the water looks clean. Your project turns a kitchen-safe biopolymer, chitosan, into tiny filter beads that can trap metal ions. Then you compare that homemade filter to a commercial resin in a real flow setup. That makes this project feel less like a classroom demo and more like an actual water treatment test.

What Is It?

Chitosan is a natural polymer made from chitin, the material in shrimp shells and other crustacean shells. Think of it like a long chain with many sticky spots. Those spots can bind metal ions such as lead, Pb²⁺, and copper, Cu²⁺. When you form chitosan into beads and cross-link them with citric acid, you make them tougher so they can hold up in flowing water.

Cross-linking is like adding bridges between strands of a rope net. The net stays together better when water pushes through it. That matters in a column, where water passes through a packed bed of beads instead of sitting still in a beaker. You can then compare how well the beads remove metals versus a commercial ion-exchange resin, which is a standard material that swaps ions in water for other ions on its surface.

Why This Is a Good Topic

This topic works well because you can change one thing at a time, then measure what happens. You can test bead size, cross-linking level, flow rate, starting metal concentration, or pH. The project also connects to real water treatment, which gives your results a clear purpose. You can learn adsorption, ion exchange, column flow, selectivity, and data analysis without needing a full research lab.

Research Questions

  • How does citric-acid cross-linking level change the Pb²⁺ removal capacity of chitosan beads?
  • How does citric-acid cross-linking level change the Cu²⁺ removal capacity of chitosan beads?
  • What is the effect of flow rate on metal removal efficiency in a packed chitosan bead column?
  • Does chitosan remove Pb²⁺ more selectively than Cu²⁺ in mixed-metal water?
  • To what extent does bead size change breakthrough time in column flow?
  • Which performs better in a column, citric-acid cross-linked chitosan beads or a commercial ion-exchange resin?

Basic Materials

  • Chitosan powder or flakes from a science supplier or educational kit.
  • Citric acid, food grade.
  • Sodium hydroxide or another approved base for bead formation, handled under teacher supervision.
  • Distilled water.
  • Beakers and graduated cylinders.
  • Plastic syringes or a small glass column for flow testing.
  • Funnel and filter paper.
  • Digital kitchen scale with 0.1 g accuracy.
  • Droppers or plastic pipettes.
  • Lead-free and copper test kits or colorimetric metal test strips.
  • Safety goggles and nitrile gloves.
  • Labels, marker, and notebook.
  • Smartphone camera for documenting color changes.

Advanced Materials

  • Chitosan with known degree of deacetylation.
  • Citric acid and buffer reagents for controlled cross-linking.
  • Glass chromatography column or equivalent packed-bed column.
  • Peristaltic pump or syringe pump.
  • ICP-OES, AAS, or another quantitative metal analyzer.
  • pH meter.
  • Analytical balance.
  • Magnetic stirrer and hot plate.
  • Sieves for bead sizing.
  • Conductivity meter.
  • Commercial ion-exchange resin for side-by-side comparison.
  • Standard Pb²⁺ and Cu²⁺ solutions prepared under institutional safety rules.

Software & Tools

  • Google Sheets: Organizes run data, calculates removal efficiency, and plots breakthrough curves.
  • ImageJ: Measures color intensity from test strips or assay images when you need a semi-quantitative readout.
  • GraphPad Prism: Fits curves and helps compare treatment groups with clear statistics.
  • Python: Handles repeated-trial data, uncertainty estimates, and cleaner graphs if you want more control.
  • PubChem: Helps you look up chemical properties and safety details for chitosan-related reagents.

Experiment Steps

  1. Define the single performance metric you care about first, such as removal efficiency, breakthrough time, or capacity per gram.
  2. Choose one bead design variable to test first, such as cross-linking level or bead size, so your study stays focused.
  3. Plan a comparison method that matches both materials, so the chitosan beads and resin face the same flow conditions.
  4. Build a calibration approach for metal measurement, so your signal can become a real concentration or a clear relative score.
  5. Design controls that separate true metal binding from simple trapping, swelling, or clogging in the column.
  6. Map out how you will compare performance across single-metal and mixed-metal samples, then decide which statistics will answer your question.

Common Pitfalls

  • Letting bead size vary too much, which changes flow resistance and makes the column comparison unfair.
  • Using a metal test method that cannot distinguish Pb²⁺ from Cu²⁺ well enough, which hides selectivity.
  • Comparing the chitosan column and resin with different packing densities, which changes contact time and skews results.
  • Ignoring pH changes during testing, which can change metal binding and make the data look random.
  • Reading color strips under different lighting, which makes the endpoint look stronger or weaker than it really is.

What Makes This Competitive

A stronger version of this project goes beyond a simple before-and-after water test. You can build a real column study, track breakthrough curves, and compare capacity under several flow conditions. You can also test mixed-metal samples, since selectivity matters more than total removal in many real waters. Careful replication, mass-balance thinking, and a fair comparison to commercial resin make the work feel much closer to research.

Project Variations

  • Test chitosan beads against nickel or zinc instead of lead and copper, then compare how ion size and charge affect uptake.
  • Compare citric-acid cross-linked beads with uncross-linked chitosan beads to isolate the effect of cross-linking on column stability.
  • Replace the column with a batch adsorption setup first, then use the same beads in flow mode to see how geometry changes performance.

Learn More

  • PubMed: Search for review articles on chitosan adsorption of heavy metals and mixed-metal selectivity.
  • NIH PubChem: Look up chitosan, citric acid, lead compounds, and copper compounds for property and safety background.
  • USGS Water Science School: Review how lead and copper move through water systems and why monitoring matters.
  • NOAA National Ocean Service: Read background on water quality, pollution pathways, and environmental contamination.
  • MIT OpenCourseWare, Chemical Engineering courses: Find free material on adsorption, packed beds, and mass transfer concepts.
  • Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering: Search recent papers on chitosan-based sorbents and column studies through your school library or journal site.

For next steps tailored to your interests, skill level, and timeline, work one-on-one with a MehtA+ mentor. Learn more about MehtA+ Science & Engineering Research Mentorship →

To discover more projects, visit the MehtA+ Science Fair Hub →

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