by Prachi Patel
A thin membranes made from a web of nanowires might become a promising tool for cleaning up oil spills and removing toxic contaminants from groundwater. When dipped into a mixture of water and oil, the 50-micrometer-thick membrane absorbs the oil, swelling to 20 times its weight.
Typically, oil spills are cleaned up using the same basic technology used 20 years ago. This includes using absorbent materials to sop up traces of oil. Natural sorbents such as hay and cellulose can soak up between 3 and 15 times their weight in oil, while synthetic polymer-based sorbents can absorb up to 70 times their weight. But these materials tend to absorb water as well.
The new membrane absorbs oil and solvents and is superhydrophobic, which means it strongly repels water. "If you were to put it in water for a month and take it out it would still be dry," says Francesco Stellacci, the MIT Materials science and engineering professor who led the work, published online in Nature Nanotechnology. Stellaci says the material should not be too expensive to make in large quantities and can be easily reused many times, although the researchers haven't measured how many times yet.
Michael Rubner, an MIT materials science and engineering professor who was not involved in the project, says that the membrane's reusability is its most distinctive feature. Other hydrophobic structures have typically been made from organic materials. The inorganic nanowires can handle temperatures up to 600 degrees Celsius, where organic materials would degrade. "If the membrane becomes foul with oil or you have to remove the oil, ... [you] can basically cook it and clean it up and, in principle, use it over and over again," Rubner says.
Image Credit: Francesco Stellacci, MIT, and Nature Nanotechnology
Source: Technology Review by MIT