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Flexible, Mechanically Durable Aerogel Composites for Oil Capture and Recovery
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Flexible, Mechanically Durable Aerogel Composites for Oil Capture and Recovery

Osman Karatum, Stephen A Steiner, Justin S Griffin, Wenbo Shi and Desiree L Plata
ACS applied materials & interfaces, Vol.8(1), pp.215-224
01-13-2016
PMID: 26701744

Abstract

Materials Science Materials Science, Multidisciplinary Nanoscience & Nanotechnology Science & Technology Science & Technology - Other Topics Technology
More than 30 years separate the two largest oil spills in North American history (the Ixtoc I and Macondo well blowouts), yet the responses to both disasters were nearly identical in spite of advanced material innovation during the same time period. Novel, mechanically durable sorbents could enable (a) sorbent use in the open ocean, (b) automated deployment to minimize workforce exposure to toxic chemicals, and (c) mechanical recovery of spilled oils. Here, we explore the use of two mechanically durable, low-density (0.1-0.2 g cm(-3)), highly porous (85-99% porosity), hydrophobic (water contact angles >120 degrees), flexible aerogel composite blankets as sorbent materials for automated oil capture and recovery: Cabot Thermal Wrap (TW) and Aspen Aerogels Spaceloft (SL). Uptake of crude oils (Iraq and Sweet Bryan Mound oils) was 8.0 +/- 0.1 and 6.5 +/- 0.3 g g(-1) for SL and 14.0 +/- 0.1 and 12.2 +/- 0.1 g g(-1) for TW, respectively, nearly twice as high as similar polyurethane- and polypropylene-based devices. Compound-specific uptake experiments and discrimination against water uptake suggested an adsorption-influenced sorption mechanism. Consistent with that mechanism, chemical extraction oil recoveries were 95 +/- 2 (SL) and 90 +/- 2% (TW), but this is an undesirable extraction route in decentralized oil cleanup efforts. In contrast, mechanical extraction routes are favorable, and a modest compression force (38 N) yielded 44.7 +/- 0.5% initially to 42.0 +/- 0.4% over 10 reuse cycles for SL and initially 55.0 +/- 0.1% for TW, degrading to 30.0 +/- 0.2% by the end of 10 cycles. The mechanical integrity of SL deteriorated substantially (800 +/- 200 to 80 +/- 30 kPa), whereas TW was more robust (380 +/- 80 to 700 +/- 100 kPa) over 10 uptake-and-compression extraction cycles.

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