Published 12:56 IST, June 22nd 2020
Smart sponge soaks up oil spills in water without harming marine life
Due to its nanocomposite coating of magnetic nanostructures that binds to the oil molecules, the smart sponge can be used umpteen times for oil absorption.
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In a unique invention, the North-western University-led team has developed a first of a kind ‘highly porous smart sponge’ that can soak up oil more than 30 times its weight in the oil spill regions of the sea. Used efficiently to clean up oil spills without any threats to the marine ecosystem, the reusable sponge can be used umpteen times, according to the release on North-western University’s website. Due to its nanocomposite coating of magnetic nanostructures that binds to the oil molecules, capturing and storing it in a way that when squeezed out, the sponge is ready to absorb the oil spills several times as good as new.
Professor Vinayak Dravid, the lead researcher, Illinois, US said, “Oil spills have devastating and immediate effects on the environment, human health, and economy.” Further he added, “Although many spills are small and may not make the evening news, they are still profoundly invasive to the ecosystem and surrounding community. Our sponge can remediate these spills in a more economic, efficient, and eco-friendly manner than any of the current state-of-the-art solutions.”
The research was published on May 27 in the journal Industrial Engineering and Chemical Research and Dravid is the Abraham Harris Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at Northwestern’s McCormick School of Engineering. However, Vikas Nandwana, a senior research associate in Dravid’s laboratory, is the author of the key research published.
A new highly porous 'smart' sponge developed by @ProfDravid selectively soaks up oil in water, making it a potentially inexpensive and efficient tool to help clean up oil spills without harming marine life. https://t.co/8Srs8dZxDK
— Northwestern Engineering (@NorthwesternEng) June 5, 2020
While oil spills terribly damage the marine life and further pose severe threats to the environment, current solutions such as using chemical dispersants to breakdown oil into very small droplets, skimming oil floating on top of the water, or absorbing it with expensive, unrecyclable sorbents, aren’t the most effective ways to combat the issue. Also, the spill clean-up is an expensive and complicated process, as per the study. Therefore, Northwestern solution “bypasses these challenges by selectively absorbing oil and leaving clean water and unaffected marine life behind.”
𝐒𝐦𝐚𝐫𝐭 𝐬𝐩𝐨𝐧𝐠𝐞 𝐬𝐞𝐥𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐯𝐞𝐥𝐲 𝐬𝐨𝐚𝐤𝐬 𝐮𝐩 𝐨𝐢𝐥 𝐢𝐧 𝐰𝐚𝐭𝐞𝐫.
— Corrotherm (@Corrotherm) June 8, 2020
A highly porous smart sponge that selectively soaks up #oil in water has been developed by a team led by Northwestern University.https://t.co/PpdPPjRuSc #Oilfield #Supplychain #Pipeline pic.twitter.com/DQQ8Wz9dma
Our sponge works effectively in diverse and extreme aquatic conditions that have different pH and salinity levels, Dravid said. We believe we can address a giga-ton problem with a nanoscale solution.
Magnetic nanostructures make “OHM sponge”
According to the published research, the magnetic nanostructures make the smart sponge perform unique additional functionalities, that is, controlled movement in the presence of an external magnetic field and desorption of adsorbed components, such as oil, in a simulated and remote manner. Further, the researchers say that OHM (oleophilic hydrophobic magnetic) nanocomposite slurry can be used to coat any cheap, commercially available sponge which is quickly and easily converted into a smart sponge (or “OHM sponge”) with a selective affinity for oil.
(Image Credit: North-Western University)
12:56 IST, June 22nd 2020