The objective of this research was to develop new hydrophobic
silica aerogel microspheres (HSAMs) with water glass and hexmethyldisilazane
for oil adsorption. The effects of the hexmethyldisilazane concentration
and drying method on the structure and organic liquid adsorption capacity
were investigated. The hexmethyldisilazane concentration of the modification
solution did not influence the microstructure and pore structure in
a noteworthy manner, which depended more on the drying method. Vacuum
drying led to more volume shrinkage of the silica gel microsphere
(SGM) than supercritical CO2 drying, thus resulting in
a larger apparent density, lower pore volume, narrower pore size distribution,
and more compact network. Owing to the large pore volume and pore
size, the HSAMs synthesized via supercritical CO2 drying
had a larger organic liquid adsorption capacity. The adsorption capacities
of the HSAMs with pore volumes of 4.04–6.44 cm3/g
for colza oil, vacuum pump oil, and hexane are up to 18.3, 18.9, and
11.8 g/g, respectively, higher than for their state-of-the-art counterparts.
The new sorbent preparation method is facile, cost-effective, safe,
and ecofriendly, and the resulting HSAMs are exceptional in capacity,
stability, and regenerability.