| Literature DB >> 26892277 |
Pranav Bhagwan Pawar1, Sumit Saxena1, Dhanashree Kamlesh Badhe1, Raghvendra Pratap Chaudhary1, Shobha Shukla1.
Abstract
The small size of Na(+) and Cl(-) ions provides a bottleneck in desalination and is a challenge in providing alternatives for continuously depleting fresh water resources. Graphene by virtue of its structural properties has the potential to address this issue. Studies have indicated that use of monolayer graphene can be used to filter micro volumes of saline solution. Unfortunately it is extremely difficult, resource intensive and almost impractical with current technology to fabricate operational devices using mono-layered graphene. Nevertheless, graphene based devices still hold the key to solve this problem due to its nano-sieving ability. Here we report synthesis of oxidized graphene frameworks and demonstrate a functional device to desalinate and purify seawater from contaminants including Na(+) and Cl(-) ions, dyes and other microbial pollutants. Micro-channels in these frameworks help in immobilizing larger suspended solids including bacteria, while nano-sieving through graphene enables the removal of dissolved ions (e.g. Cl(-)). Nano-sieving incorporated with larger frameworks has been used in filtering Na(+) and Cl(-) ions in functional devices.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26892277 PMCID: PMC4759691 DOI: 10.1038/srep21150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Micro structural analysis of porous membranes fabricated from 3D oxidized graphene framework (a) Cross-sectional SEM micrograph of graphene based filter showing micro-pores. Bottom-left inset shows micrograph of large chunk while the bottom-right inset shows a zoomed in image of a part of the same (b) SEM micrograph shows 3D view of a lower dimensional microhole array inside larger microhole structure. Inset on the left shows the front surface of similar such structure while the inset on the right shows the Raman spectrum (top-right), UV-Vis absorption spectrum (middle-right), zoomed in image of nanohole within microhole (bottom-right) and the FFT image of sheet (top-left). (c) Shows large (~10 μm) NaCl crystallites sticking on the membrane after filtration. The inset at the bottom-left shows smaller (<200 nm) NaCl crystals on the surface of membrane. (d) TEM micrograph of clusters of NaCl nano crystals on membrane. The EDX confirms the presence of Na and Cl elements.
Figure 2(a) Conductivity test of filtrate obtained by filtering 0.5 M NaCl solution. The inset shows the permeability of the filter, plotted on logarithmic scale. (b) Recycling performance of the filter shows that the filter’s salt rejection performance remains almost unaltered even after ten cycles of filtration.
Figure 3(a) UV-Vis spectrum of the water samples bottle for fecal pollution test for sea water and filtrate obtained from porous graphene filters. The inset shows visible color change in “Aquacheck” water testing kit (b) SEM micrograph of the porous graphene filter surface showing immobilized e-coli bacteria on the surface of the porous graphene filter.