Login / Signup

Oil-Water Separation using Synthetic Trees.

Ndidi L EyeghelemeViverjita UmashankarDanielle N MillerArun Kumar KotaJonathan B Boreyko
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2023)
Existing oil-water filtration techniques require gravity or a pump as the driving force for separation. Here, we demonstrate transpiration-powered oil-water filtration using a synthetic tree, which operates pumplessly and against gravity. From top to bottom, our synthetic tree was composed of: a nanoporous "leaf" to generate suction via evaporation, a vertical array of glass tubes serving as the tree's xylem conduits, and filters attached to the tube inlets to act as the oil-excluding roots. When placing the tree in an oil emulsion bath, filtrate samples were measured to be 97-98% pure water using gravimetry and refractometry. The spontaneous oil-water separation offered by synthetic trees could be useful for applications such as oil spill cleanup, wastewater purification, and oil extraction.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • liquid chromatography
  • wastewater treatment
  • single molecule