ORIGINAL: Chemical & Engineering News - ACS
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June 26, 2013
Materials Science: A chemical treatment makes a household sponge thirsty for oil instead of water
Waterproof Sponge. Water droplets rest on top of a superhydrophobic sponge coated in a thin layer of polypyrrole. Credit: Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. |
A sponge that can’t absorb a single drop of water may seem like a dud. But if it readily soaks up oil, it could help purify chemical
syntheses or clean up oil spills on water. Researchers now report a simple chemical method for turning a household sponge into a water-blocking oil absorber (Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 2013, DOI: 10.1021/ie400942t).
In response to oil spills on water, cleanup crews often turn to
sorbent materials, such as wool, straw, cotton, and synthetic sponges,
to separate oil from the water. Sponges are the best choice for the job,
say Zhaozhu Zhang and colleagues at the Chinese Academy of Science.
The materials can absorb a lot of liquid in a short time, and they can
float. However, they suck up water as well as oil, so the sponges’
soaking capacity isn’t fully used to remove oil. To make the materials
more efficient, Zhang and colleagues decided to make an oil-specific
sponge.
The researchers purchased polyurethane sponges at a local furniture
store and coated its entire surface with a thin layer of polypyrrole.
This polymer is well known for being water-repellent and having a strong
affinity for oil, says Paul L. Edmiston, a chemist at the College of Wooster, who was not involved in this study.
To prepare the sponge for its polypyrrole coating, the researchers first dipped it into ferric chloride and 1H, 1H, 2H, 2H-perfluorooctyltriethoxysilane
(PTES). They then put the PTES-coated sponge into a sealed chamber over
a pool of volatile pyrrole, which vaporized and infused the sponge. The
PTES helped the pyrrole adhere to the sponge surface. Meanwhile, the
iron from the ferric chloride helped to catalyze the polymerization of
the pyrrole into a thin coating over the sponge’s pores.
When the scientists added droplets of water to the surface of the revamped sponge, the water stayed in a bead and wasn’t absorbed.
Droplets of oil, however, disappeared into the sponge immediately. The researchers also dipped the sponge into a variety of oils, including motor oil and soybean oil. The sponge sopped up more than 20 times its
dry weight for each of the oils. The team tested how the sponge fared after reuse: They sopped up oil with the sponge and then wrung out the
absorbed oil. After repeating those steps five times, the sponge could absorb at least 17 times its weight in oil.
Other groups have modified meshlike materials to absorb oil, Edmiston
says. But he likes the idea of an oil-absorbing sponge, because it has “lots of room to pick up the oil.”
Edmiston is concerned that the cost of making these sponges would be prohibitive in the case of a large-scale oil-spill cleanup operation.
Although the sponges themselves are cheap, the chemicals used in the treatment are expensive. The superhydrophobic sponges, though may find a
place in certain industrial operations, Edmiston says, like removing hydrophobic solvents during chemical syntheses. Such small-scale
applications would probably be the first uses for the revamped sponges, he says.
Chemical & Engineering News
ISSN 0009-2347
Copyright © 2013 American Chemical Society
ISSN 0009-2347
Copyright © 2013 American Chemical Society
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