News Release

Novel platform purifies oil-contaminated seawater

The approach has implications for improving water scarcity around the world, researchers say

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Tsinghua University Press

an organogel-hydrogel compositing strategy for optimizing comprehensive performances of solar-driven evaporators in practical oil-polluted water purification

image: We propose an organogel-hydrogel compositing strategy for optimizing comprehensive performances of solar-driven evaporators in practical oil-polluted water purification. Ultra-stable floating ability, anti-oil-fouling property, accelerated vaporization process, long-term salt-resistance and scalability are integrated at one platform. view more 

Credit: News organizations may use or redistribute this image, with proper attribution, as part of news coverage of this paper only.

The United Nations’ most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report paints a bleak picture for the world’s water supply: Of the 7.8 billion people on Earth, about 4 billion do not have access to sufficiently clean water for at least a month every year. While several water purification schemes have been proposed, they consistently fail at some critical point — typically, they are not stable, big or hardy enough for real-world applications, according to researchers based at Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Xiamen University in China who may have cracked the problem.

 

On March 22 in Nano Research, they reported the details of a new platform that uses sunlight to purify seawater with high energy efficiency comparing with other similar approaches (above 90%) while also avoiding common pitfalls.  

 

“There is a tremendous demand for freshwater in households and for industrial, agricultural and other applications, so various water purification technologies have been developed to alleviate the shortage of freshwater resources,” said paper author Miao Wang, Xiamen University’s College of Materials. “Comparing the pathways, solar-driven purification of seawater or contaminated water via interfacial evaporation is promising as a low-cost system.”

 

Such purification approaches use sunlight to heat water at its surface, evaporating the liquid and separating the polluted or salty counterparts from the water molecules, which then escape into the air as vapor to enter the natural cycle of condensation to become clean, consumable water. The problem, according to paper author Xu Hou, Xiamen University’s College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, and College of Physical Science and Technology, is that attempts to scale this approach for real-world application have been hindered by oil contamination, instability, salt-crystallization and complicated fabrication processes.

 

“To generate more purified water under the same amount of sunlight, how do we acquire more energy to locally heat water to improve the vaporization rate — without encountering the drawbacks of other approaches?” Hou asked. “We answered that question and designed an ultra-stable, salt-resistant evaporator platform that can maintain accelerated evaporation while also continuing to repulse oil to prevent contamination.”

 

The researchers combined two gels in an oil-in-water emulsion. The gel material, called organohydrogel, can shift between phases of matter but is largely liquid contained in a web of molecular chains. By dosing the organohydrogel with carbon nanotubes, the researchers created “hot spots” that can locally focus solar light to the surface of the water, preventing the dissipation of heat throughout the area. The branched structure of the material also helps impede energy dissipation and aids in molecule transfer to prevent salt crystallization.

 

The organohydrogel has a low density, so when dipping below the water surface level, it can self-float again for enduring evaporation process. The raised water surrounds the evaporator, creating a lateral capillary repulsion effect in which the oil molecules peel away from the water being heated, like mercury pulling away from the glass of a thermometer.

 

In experimental tests, the platform evaporated about 2.4 kilograms of water per square meter per hour and could persist for 240 hours without extra disposal needed — even in conditions of “tremendous oil contamination,” said paper author Shutao Wang, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Key Laboratory of Bio-inspired Materials and Interfacial Science, Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry.

 

“We developed an anti-oil-fouling heating platform with remarkable solar energy utilization, which shows great potential for practical, solar-driven water purification even in heavily contaminated water,” Wang said, “We hope that this economic and environmentally friendly approach will aid in further relieving the global scarcity of freshwater resources.”

 

Other contributors include Xuetao Xu, Xizi Wan, Haonan Li and Yikai Zhang, CAS Key Laboratory of Bio-inspired Materials and Interfacial Science, Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry; and Wen He and Shuli Wang, College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Xiamen University. Xu, Li, Zhang and Shutao Wang are also affiliated with the University of CAS.

 

The National Key Research and Development Program of China, the National Natural Science Foundation of China’s Projects of International Cooperation and Exchanges, and National Program for Special Support of Eminent Professionals and the Fundamental Research Funds for Central Universities supported this research.

 

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About Nano Research 

 

Nano Research is a peer-reviewed, international and interdisciplinary research journal, sponsored by Tsinghua University and the Chinese Chemical Society. It offers readers an attractive mix of authoritative and comprehensive reviews and original cutting-edge research papers. After more than 10 years of development, it has become one of the most influential academic journals in the nano field. Rapid review to ensure quick publication is a key feature of Nano Research. In 2020 InCites Journal Citation Reports, Nano Research has an Impact Factor of 8.897 (8.696, 5 years), the total cites reached 23150, and the number of highly cited papers reached 129, ranked among the top 2.5% of over 9000 academic journals, ranking first in China's international academic journals.

 

About Tsinghua University Press

 

Established in 1980, belonging to Tsinghua University, Tsinghua University Press (TUP) is a leading comprehensive higher education and professional publisher in China. Committed to building a top-level global cultural brand, after 41 years of development, TUP has established an outstanding managerial system and enterprise structure, and delivered multimedia and multi-dimensional publications covering books, audio, video, electronic products, journals and digital publications. In addition, TUP actively carries out its strategic transformation from educational publishing to content development and service for teaching & learning and was named First-class National Publisher for achieving remarkable results.


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