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A sustainable layered nanofiber/sheet aerogels enabling repeated life cycles for effective oil/water separation

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2023 35 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ting Dong, Jia‐Horng Lin Ting Dong, Huabiao Ye, Wenhui Wang, Wenhui Wang, Yuanming Zhang, Yuanming Zhang, Guangting Han, Guangting Han, Fudi Peng, Fudi Peng, Fudi Peng, Fudi Peng, Ching‐Wen Lou, Ching‐Wen Lou, Ching‐Wen Lou, Shan Chi, Shan Chi, Yanming Liu, Cui Liu, Cui Liu, Jia‐Horng Lin Jia‐Horng Lin

Summary

Researchers developed a sustainable layered nanofiber/sheet aerogel from electrospun polycaprolactone using a gas-inflating method, creating a biodegradable oil absorbent that can be reused across multiple life cycles without releasing microplastics.

Discarded oil-containing absorbents, which has been used in handling oil spills, are tricky to deal with and have rose global environmental concerns regarding release of microplastics. Herein, we developed a facile strategy to fabricate sustainable absorbents by a gas-inflating method, through which 2D electrospinning polycaprolactone nanofiber membranes were directly inflated into highly porous 3D nanofiber/sheet aerogels with layered long fiber structure. The membranes were inflated rapidly from a baseline porosity of 81.98% into 97.36-99.42% in 10-60 min. The obtained aerogels were further wrapped with -CH<sub>3</sub> ended siloxane structures using CH<sub>3</sub>SiCl<sub>3</sub>. This hydrophobic absorbent (CA ≈ 145°) could rapidly trap oils from water with sorption range of 25.60-42.13 g/g and be recycled by simple squeeze due to its mechanical robustness. As-prepared aerogels also showed high separation efficiency to separate oils from both oil/water mixtures and oil-in-water emulsions (>96.4%). Interestingly, the oil-loaded absorbent after cleaning with absolute ethanol could be re-dissolved in selected solvents and promptly reconstituted by re-electrospinning and gas-inflation. The reconstituted aerogels were used as fire-new oil absorbents for repeated life cycles. The novel design, low cost and sustainability of the absorbent provides an efficient and environmentally-friendly solution for handling oil spills.

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