Loading…

Oil pollution remediation with mass-producible and recyclable amphiphilic magnetic Janus particles

[Display omitted] •3D printed parallelized and multiplexed microfluidic device effectively produces functional Janus particles.•The Janus particles can form stable Pickering emulsions from oil pollutants present in water.•This approach is effective remediation method regardless of the oil viscosity,...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Chemical engineering journal (Lausanne, Switzerland : 1996) Switzerland : 1996), 2023-09, Vol.471, p.144734, Article 144734
Main Authors: Shin, Seonghun, Cho, Seongsu, Song, Ryungeun, Kim, Hyejeong, Lee, Jinkee
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:[Display omitted] •3D printed parallelized and multiplexed microfluidic device effectively produces functional Janus particles.•The Janus particles can form stable Pickering emulsions from oil pollutants present in water.•This approach is effective remediation method regardless of the oil viscosity, water pH or its salinity.•Over 99.7% of unconventional heavy crude oils can be recovered from water.•The Janus particles can be reusable and are environmentally friendly. The growing global energy demand and declining conventional oil supply have accelerated the use of unconventional heavy crude oils (UHCOs). However, high viscosities of UHCOs make conventional remediation methods ineffective for removing them from water. To address this challenge, we propose Pickering emulsification using amphiphilic magnetic Janus particles (AMJPs) as an efficient remediation method for UHCOs. AMJPs are produced using a multiplexed 3D-printed microfluidic droplet generator. The design of the generator is carefully optimized through a combination of experimental and numerical studies to achieve mass production of the monodisperse particles. These AMJPs have the remarkable ability to emulsify oil pollutants, with viscosities ranging from as low as 0.31 mPa∙s to as high as 97,100 mPa∙s. The Pickering emulsification using AMJPs results in rapid and highly efficient (>99.7%) recovery of UHCOs from water in a recyclable manner. We realize the first ever mass production of AMJPs via 3D-printed droplet generators. The use of these AMJPs in the Pickering emulsification approach has potential applications beyond UHCO remediation, including food, cosmetics, and pharmaceutical industries.
ISSN:1385-8947
1873-3212
DOI:10.1016/j.cej.2023.144734