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Oil/Water Separation with Selective Superantiwetting/Superwetting Surface Materials
1.3K
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68
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2014
Year
Oil pollution drives the need to separate oil from oily water, and recent advances use selective superantiwetting/superwetting surfaces that absorb oil while repelling water. This review aims to describe the principles and recent advances of selective oil/water absorption materials. It examines their design, fabrication, and experimental models for oil/water separation.
Abstract The separation of oil from oily water is an important pursuit because of increasing worldwide oil pollution. Separation by the use of materials with selective oil/water absorption is a relatively recent area of development, yet highly promising. Owing to their selective superantiwetting/superwetting properties towards water and oil, superhydrophobic/superoleophilic surfaces and underwater superoleophobic surfaces have been developed for the separation of oil/water‐free mixtures and emulsions. In this Review, after a short introduction to oil/water separation, we describe the principles of materials with selective oil/water absorption and outline recent advances in oil/water separation with superwetting/superantiwetting materials, including their design, their fabrication, and models of experimental setups. Finally, we discuss the current state of this new field and point out the remaining problems and future challenges.
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