Currently, fluorides and long-chain aliphatic compounds are the most frequent low surface energy chemicals utilized in the preparation of superhydrophobic coatings, but associated environmental risks and instability restrict their potential application in oil-water separation. This research described a superhydrophobic coating based on rosin acid and SiO modified cotton fabric to overcome this challenge. By means of spray impregnation and UV-assisted click reaction, sulfhydryl modified rosin acid (RA), Octavinyl-POSS, and SiO were grafted onto the surface of cotton fabric to obtain RA-SiO superhydrophobic coating with rough surfaces such as lotus leaf and low surface energy. The RA-SiO superhydrophobic coating had favorable self-cleaning ability, and also adsorbed various light and heavy oils to achieve efficient separation of oil-water mixtures. The separation efficiency was 96.3% and the permeate flux was 6110.84 (L⋅m⋅h) after 10 repetitions. The RA-SiO superhydrophobic coating was found to be effective in separating oil-in-water and oil-in-water emulsions, and the separation mechanism was elaborated. In addition, it could effectively separate emulsions even after mechanical abrasion and chemical immersion, and had excellent stability. The fluorine-free and environmentally friendly low-cost superhydrophobic coating based on rosin acid is expected to play a significant potential in oil-water separation applications due to its excellent separation performance.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.129797 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!