4.8 Article

Thermally Sensitized Membranes for Crude Oil-Water Remediation under Visible Light

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 43, Pages 48572-48579

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c13888

Keywords

produced water; thermal annealing; stainless steel mesh; oil-water separation; photocatalysis

Funding

  1. King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals (KFUPM), Dhahran, Saudi Arabia [181002, 161001]
  2. University of Kansas [2234508]

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Effective remediation of produced water requires separating crude oil-water mixture and removing the dissolved organic pollutants. Membranes with selective wettability for water over oil enable the gravity-driven separation of an oil-water mixture by allowing water to permeate through while repelling oil. However, these membranes are often limited by their inability to remove the dissolved organic pollutants. In this work, a membrane with in-air superhydrophilic and underwater superoleophobic wettability is fabricated by thermal annealing of a stainless steel mesh. The resulting membrane possesses a hierarchical surface texture covered with a photocatalytic oxide layer composed of iron oxide and chromium oxide. The membrane exhibits chemical and mechanical robustness, which makes it suitable for remediation of crude oil and water mixture. Further, after being fouled by crude oil, the membrane can recover its inherent water-rich permeate flux upon visible light irradiation. Finally, the membrane demonstrates that it can separate surfactant-stabilized crude oil-in-water emulsion under gravity and decontaminate water-rich permeate by photocatalytic degradation of dissolved organic pollutants upon continuous irradiation of visible light.

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