R&D News Technology

Indian researchers develop super-hydrophobic cotton for oil-spill cleanup

Guwahati (ISJ): Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Guwahati, have developed a new class of super-hydrophobic cotton composite with Metal-Organic Framework (MOF) that promises marine oil-spill clean-up in near future.

This is a novel, highly porous, and water-repellent super-hydrophobic cotton composite material containing MOF, which can absorb oil selectively from an oil-water mixture, researchers said.

The MOF composite has great capability for selective separation of the oils from oil/water mixtures, and the separation efficiency lies between 95 percent and 98 percent, irrespective of the chemical composition and density of the oils. Besides, the MOF composite is also able to absorb large volumes of oils and can be reused for a minimum of 10 times so that the sorbents can provide more recovery of the spilled oil.

The practical applications of this research include cleaning the spilled oil from environmental water (river or ocean water) during oil transportation with high efficiency and large absorption capacity, thus reducing environmental water pollution. Both heavy and light oils can be effectively absorbed by the material, which is easy to prepare, cost-effective and recyclable, IIT, Guwahati said.

Our goal was to develop a new material which could be synthesized easily and should be cost-effective. We have grown a new MOF material on the surface of medical cotton, which is environmentally friendly and cost effective. Such low-cost material will reduce the production cost of the material for large-scale synthesis for real applications, compared to currently available materials," said Dr. Shyam P. Biswas, Associate Professor in the Department of Chemistry, IIT Guwahati.

The results of this study have recently been published in the American Chemical Society’s journal Applied Materials and Interfaces.

“In a country like India where petroleum hydrocarbons are the major sources of fuel, accidental oil spills occur frequently during transportation and its storage. The material developed in our laboratory will certainly be beneficial to reduce the environmental water pollution by efficiently absorbing the spilled oil from environmental water,” Dr. Biswas added.

MOFs are a class of compounds containing metal ions coordinated to organic ligands to form 3D structures. With the special feature of highly porous materials it acts like a sponge. The team led by Dr. Biswas initially developed a super-hydrophobic MOF which can repel the water and float on the water surface. Then, they grew the same MOF on the surface of medical cotton. It was observed that the medical cotton changes from hydrophilic to super-hydrophobic material and can float on the water surface. The MOF-coated cotton fiber composite showed water repellence with a water contact angle (WCA) of 163°.

The flexible super-hydrophobic MOF composite showed an oil absorption capacity of more than 2500 weight percent. Motor oil, kerosene and gasoline were used by the team in this study to investigate the real-life potential of the material for oil-spill clean-up.

 

Source: India Science Wire

Image: Representative

Related posts

MIT scientists develop wearable system to help visually impaired users navigate

ISJ Bureau

MIT researchers develop a simple system to monitor power consumption

ISJ Bureau

Kerala researchers produce biodiesel from variety of oils, get the process patented

ISJ Bureau

Leave a Comment