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Light-Propelled Super-Hydrophobic Sponge Motor and its Application in Oil-Water Separation.

Xiao Dan SunHanxing YangYuzhen LiangKai YanLeipeng LiuDangge GaoJianzhong Ma
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Self-propelled separation materials, that is, motor, are one of the keys to realizing smart oil-water separation. Although three-dimensional sponges such as commercial melamine sponge (MS) exhibit excellent oil-water separation ability, they cannot move by themselves on water. Aiming at solving this problem, a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ) modified MS motor (PDMS@MS/MoS 2 ) with an asymmetric multilayer structure was prepared, in which the photothermal layer MoS 2 provided the propelling force for the motor under infrared light irradiation, and the middle layer PDMS was used as the superhydrophobic modified agent and adhesive agent between commercial MS and MoS 2 powder. PDMS coated MS (PDMS@MS) as the superhydrophobic layer showed good superhydrophobic ability (153.1°) and oil-water separation capacity (52.33 g/g to liquid paraffin). Furthermore, the introduction of MoS 2 made the speed of the sponge motor reach 8.27 mm s -1 with a removal quantity of 12.20 g/g for cyclohexane. After recycling 8 times, the contact angle, cyclohexane capturing amount, and average velocity of the motor were 150.3°, 11.40 g/g, and 8.41 mm/s, respectively. Meanwhile, PDMS@MS/MoS 2 kept a similar light-propelling velocity (∼8 mm) at different pH values and in simulated seawater, demonstrating that the light-propelling motor possessed a good cycle and practical performance, which provides a possibility for the directional light propulsion of a sponge motor in oil-water separation.
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