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Fatty acid foams for nonselective physical removal of microplastics from aqueous solutions
Summary
Researchers developed a foam-based separation method using microtubular assemblies of 12-hydroxystearic acid to physically remove microplastics from water, finding that fatty acid microtubules formed with ethanolamine jam within foam channels to suppress drainage and enhance retention of microplastic particles across diverse polymer types and particle sizes.
Microplastics (MPs) are pervasive environmental contaminants whose removal from water remains a major challenge due to their small size, chemical diversity, and dynamic surface properties arising from environmental aging/weathering. Here, we present a concept of foam-based separation method that physically traps MPs in the foam phase using microtubular assemblies of 12-hydroxystearic acid. These foams are stabilized by anisotropic fatty acid microtubules formed in the presence of ethanolamine, which jam within the foam channels and suppress fluid drainage thereby enhancing MP retention and foam stability. MPs of different sizes, polymer compositions (including polystyrene, polypropylene, polyethylene terephthalate, and polytetrafluoroethylene), and weathered states were retained in the foam phase without requiring chemical modification or relying on chemical interactions between the fatty acid and MPs. Thermally induced transition of the fatty acid microtubules into nanomicelles above the characteristic phase transition temperature (∼35 °C) enables controlled foam collapse and recovery of trapped MPs. The cumulative removal efficiency can exceed 85% through multiple foaming cycles, matching predictions from a probabilistic retention model. This work shows that foams can provide a simple platform to trap MPs, thus providing a new physical-removal strategy that does not rely on the particles' chemistry.
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