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Nanotubes to soak up oil spills
Chemistry World ^ | 11 November 2009 | Lewis Brindley

Posted on 11/13/2009 10:03:13 PM PST by neverdem

Chinese chemists have made sturdy nanotube sponges that can selectively absorb oil and volatile chemicals in preference to water. The sponges float on water and can absorb up almost 180 times their own weight in oil, giving them great potential for mopping up industrial spillages. 

'We are very excited about the potential of our material,' says Anyuan Cao, who led the work at Peking University, Beijing, China. 'The sponges can absorb a variety of oils - from volatile solvents to thick and sticky oil - but they are also elastic and robust. They can be wrung out like towels and re-used, and are stable to harsh environments like sea water or high temperature.'

A typical goal of nanotube production is to create linear arrays, but Cao's team chose to produce tubes that were as long as possible, but in a disordered arrangement. The team used a chemical vapour deposition (CVD) process to make an amorphous mix of multi-walled nanotubes hundreds of micrometres long. The resulting material has extremely low density, as the nanotubes are arranged like a series of matchsticks dropped on top of each other, which creates large empty pores.

Sponge structure

Illustration and cross-sectional SEM image of the sponge structure

© Advanced Materials

This structure lets the tubes slide over one another, allowing the material to flex and compress before springing back into its original shape. To prepare the sponges to absorb liquids, the team soaked them in ethanol and slowly squeezed them dry, creating 'densified' black pellets around 20 times smaller. When these pellets are exposed to oils, they quickly recover their original dimensions as the liquids fill the gaps between the tubes. 

Using nanotubes does not make the process prohibitively expensive for large-scale use, Cao says. 'The cost to make centimetre-scale sponges should be negligible,' he tells Chemistry World. 'The equipment to produce them could be easily scaled up for large-scale production, and of course they can be re-used thousands of times.' 

'This material is essentially a nanotube aerogel with a very low density - although it is not brittle like other aerogels,' says Ian Kinloch, a nanotube expert at the University of Manchester, UK. 'Although similar materials have been made from nanotubes before, this is the first time they have been used as a sponge, and they certainly meet all the criteria.'

Nanotube sponge absorbing oil

Nanotube sponge cleaning up a diesel oil film on water, and swelling to accommodate the absorbed oil

© Advanced Materials

But absorption is not the only thing this material could be useful for, and there are many promising uses beyond oil spill recovery, Kinloch notes. One example is stretching it into high-performance fibres or sheets for use in filtration systems, thermal insulation or noise-absorption. Since nanotubes are good conductors of electricity, there are also many applications in electronics. 

'In future, one possibility is functionalising the surface of the nanotubes to make them more selective. This way, they might be fine-tuned to absorb only a specific oil or solvent,' Kinloch suggests. 

 

References

X Giu et al, Adv. Mater., 2009, DOI: 10.1002/adma.200902986

Also of interest

Nanotube fibres

Acid solution for nanotube fibres

01 November 2009

Carbon nanotubes can be dissolved in chlorosulfonic acid for easy processing


Carbon nanotube rotating as it grows

Nanotube growth caught on camera

23 July 2009

Scientists provide proof that nanotubes rotate as they grow



TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: cnt; cntsponges; cvd; oilspills
Carbon Nanotube Sponges

Title& link to abstract

1 posted on 11/13/2009 10:03:15 PM PST by neverdem
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To: neverdem

Will these be the new sham wow? I can see it now a short Chinese person shouting out in a commercial the cham wow!


2 posted on 11/13/2009 10:23:34 PM PST by guitarplayer1953 (Romak 7.62X54MM, AK47 7.62X39MM, LARGO 9X23MM, HAPINESS IS A WARM GUN BANG BANG YEA YEA)
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To: neverdem
It's pretty neat how this line of research has grown. I worked for Dr. Huffman, the first man ever to see what fullerenes actually looked like.
3 posted on 11/13/2009 10:31:42 PM PST by Nateman (If liberals aren't screaming you're doing it wrong.)
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To: neverdem

Perhaps they can manufacture these to absorb fat from the human body. Way too many obese people out there.


4 posted on 11/13/2009 11:43:07 PM PST by roadcat
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To: El Gato; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Robert A. Cook, PE; lepton; LadyDoc; jb6; tiamat; PGalt; Dianna; ...
You Can Make Your Own Liquid Tamiflu At Home

Medicines to Deter Some Cancers Are Not Taken

Carbonic acid captured

FReepmail me if you want on or off my health and science ping list.

5 posted on 11/13/2009 11:47:47 PM PST by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: neverdem

when we had the oil spill here in the Philippines, the local hairdressers collected all the hair they cut to use to soak up the oil spill.

a Lot cheaper, and biodegradable.


6 posted on 11/14/2009 1:13:21 AM PST by LadyDoc (liberals only love politically correct poor people)
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