la7b00188_si_007.mpg (11.66 MB)
Download fileDetergency and Its Implications for Oil Emulsion Sieving and Separation
media
posted on 2017-04-07, 00:00 authored by Thomas
M. Schutzius, Christopher Walker, Tanmoy Maitra, Romy Schönherr, Christos Stamatopoulos, Stefan Jung, Carlo Antonini, Hadi Eghlidi, Julie L. Fife, Alessandra Patera, Dominique Derome, Dimos PoulikakosSeparating
petroleum hydrocarbons from water is an important problem
to address in order to mitigate the disastrous effects of hydrocarbons
on aquatic ecosystems. A rational approach to address the problem
of marine oil–water separation is to disperse the oil with
the aid of surfactants in order to minimize the formation of large
slicks at the water surface and to maximize the oil–water interfacial
area. Here we investigate the fundamental wetting and transport behavior
of such surfactant-stabilized droplets and the flow conditions necessary
to perform sieving and separation of these stabilized emulsions. We
show that, for water-soluble surfactants, such droplets are completely
repelled by a range of materials (intrinsically underwater superoleophobic)
due to the detergency effect; therefore, there is no need for surface
micro-/nanotexturing or chemical treatment to repel the oil and prevent
fouling of the filter. We then simulate and experimentally investigate
the effect of emulsion flow rate on the transport and impact behavior
of such droplets on rigid meshes to identify the minimum pore opening
(w) necessary to filter a droplet with a given diameter
(d) in order to minimize the pressure drop across
the meshand therefore maximize the filtering efficiency, which
is strongly dependent on w. We define a range of
flow conditions and droplet sizes where minimum droplet deformation
is to be expected and therefore find that the condition of w ≈ d is sufficient for efficient
separation. With this new understanding, we demonstrate the use of
a commercially available filterwithout any additional surface
engineering or functionalizationto separate oil droplets (d < 100 μm) from a surfactant-stabilized emulsion
with a flux of ∼11,000 L m–2 h–1 bar–1. We believe these findings can inform the
design of future oil separation materials.