| Literature DB >> 36079957 |
Rosalam Sarbatly1,2, Chel-Ken Chiam2,3.
Abstract
Oil separation from water becomes a challenging issue in industries, especially when large volumes of stable oil/water emulsion are discharged. The present short review offers an overview of the recent developments in the nanofiber membranes used in oily wastewater treatment. This review notes that nanofiber membranes can efficiently separate the free-floating oil, dispersed oil and emulsified oil droplets. The highly interconnected pore structure nanofiber membrane and its modified wettability can enhance the permeation flux and reduce the fouling. The nanofiber membrane is an efficient separator for liquid-liquid with different densities, which can act as a rejector of either oil or water and a coalescer of oil droplets. The present paper focuses on nanofiber membranes' production techniques, nanofiber membranes' modification for flux and separation efficiency improvement, and the future direction of research, especially for practical developments.Entities:
Keywords: flux; membrane; nanofiber; nanomaterial; oily wastewater; separation efficiency; wettability modification
Year: 2022 PMID: 36079957 PMCID: PMC9458146 DOI: 10.3390/nano12172919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.719
Figure 1Various types of nanofiber production techniques. (a) Needle electrospinning, reproduced with permission from [21], copyright 2021 Springer Nature; (b) needleless electrospinning, reproduced with permission from [22], copyright 2021 Elsevier; (c) melt-blowing, reproduced with permission from [23], copyright 2013 Elsevier; (d) melt-blending, reproduced with [24], (e) drawing, reproduced with permission from [25], copyright 2014 Taylor & Francis; (f) centrifugal force spinning, reproduced with permission from [26], copyright 2018 Springer Nature; (g) phase separation, reproduced with permission from [25], copyright 2014 Taylor & Francis; (h) template synthesis, reproduced with permission from [25], copyright 2014 Taylor & Francis; and (i) self-assembly, reproduced with permission from [25], copyright 2014 Taylor & Francis.
Types of polymeric materials used in different nanofiber production techniques.
| Technique | Polymeric Material | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Needle electrospinning | PVP, PAN, PVDF, PU, PEO, PLA, PCL, PES, Nylon 6, PSU, PVA, PET | [ |
| Needleless electrospinning | PBS, PVA, EPS, PEO, PAN, PA, PCL, PLLA | [ |
| Melt-blowing | PP, PU, PBT, PE, PS, PPS, Nylon 6, PLLA, TPVA | [ |
| Melt-blending extrusion | PMMA, EVOH, PE, PET, PTT, PBT | [ |
| Drawing | PAN, PCL, PEO, PET, PA, PVA, PVB, PMMA, HA, | [ |
| Centrifugal force spinning | PVA, PLLA, Nylon 6, PAN, PHBV, PLGA, PS, PCL | [ |
| Phase inversion | PLLA, PPTA | [ |
| Template synthesis | PCL, PPy | [ |
| Self-assembly | PA, PLLA, PAH, POM | [ |
PVP: Polyvinyl pyrrolidone; PAN: Polyacrylonitrile; PVDF: Polyvinylidene fluoride; PU: Polyurethane; PEO: Polyethylene oxide; PLA: Poly(lactic acid); PCL: Polycaprolactone; PES: Polyethersulfone; PSU: Polysulphone; PVA: Polyvinyl alcohol; PBS: Poly (butylene succinate), a bio-based polyester; EPS: Expanded Polystyrene; PLLA: Poly(L-lactide); PP: Polypropylene; PBT: Poly(butylene terephthalate); PE: Polyethylene; PS: Polystyrene; PPS: Poly(phenylene sulfide); TPVA: Thermoplastic polyvinyl alcohol; PMMA: Poly(methyl methacrylate); EVOH: Polyethylene-co-polyvinyl alcohol; PTT: Polytrimethylene terephthalate; PEO: Polyethylene oxide; PA: Polyamide; PVB: Polyvinyl butyral; HA: Hyaluronic acid; PHBV: Poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate); PLGA: Poly-lactide-co-glycolide acid; PPTA: Poly(p-phenylene teraphthalamide); PPy: Polypyrrole; PAH: Poly(allylamine hydrochloride); POM: Polyoxometalate
Comparison of different nanofiber production techniques.
| Technique | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Needle electrospinning | Scalable, feasible of fiber dimension control, fibers are long and continuous | Solvent recovery issues, low productivity, instable jetting, high voltage requirement |
| Needleless electrospinning | Scalable, feasible of fiber dimension control, fibers are long and continuous, high productivity | Solvent recovery issues, high voltage requirement |
| Melt-blowing | Scalable, feasible of fiber dimension control, fibers are long and continuous, high productivity, solvent recovery is not required | Number of suitable polymers is limited, high temperature requirement |
| Melt-blending extrusion | Scalable, feasible of fiber dimension control, fibers are long and continuous, high productivity, solvent recovery is not required | Number of suitable polymers is limited, high temperature requirement |
| Drawing | Simple process | Low scalability, incapable of fiber dimension control, discontinuous process |
| Centrifugal force spinning | Scalable, feasible of fiber dimension control, high voltage is not required | Require high temperature |
| Phase inversion | Simple equipment | Low scalability, incapable of fiber dimension control, limited to selective polymers |
| Template synthesis | Easy to modify the fiber diameter by using different size of template | Complex process |
| Self-assembly | Easy to obtain smaller nanofibers | Low scalability, incapable of fiber dimension control, complex process |
Application of nanomaterials in the nanofiber membranes for the oil/water mixture separation.
| Base Polymer | Nanomaterials | Wettability | Oil/Water System | Oil Content in Water | Filtration Mode | Findings | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PVDF | P(MMA- | Highly hydrophobic and superoleophilic | Dodecane/water | 1:1 volume ratio | Gravity-driven | 2500–3000 a | - | Enhanced up to 7 times higher Young’s modulus; exhibited up to 17 times faster permeation of oil and organic solvent; highly stable and excellent fouling resistant during a 70 min continuous oil/water separation filtration; flux was 24 times higher than the pristine PVDF. | [ |
| PI | SNPs | Superhydrophobic and superoleophilic | Dichloromethane/water | 50%, | Gravity-driven | >4400 | 98.81 | Mimicked to a frogspawn structure; high resistance to damages due to high temperature (150 °C), acid/basic conditions and organic/inorganic solvents; the permeate flux greater than 4400 L/m2 h after 20 separation cycles. | [ |
| PVDF | SNPs | Superhydrophobic and superoleophilic | Hexane/water | 1:1 volume ratio | Gravity-driven | 1857 ± 101 | 99 | Excellent multi-cycle performance and stable chemical resistance. | [ |
| PI | SNPs | Superhydrophobic and superoleophilic | Dichloromethane/water | 1:1 volume ratio | Gravity-driven | 4798 | >99 | A fluorine-free membrane dip-coated and in situ crosslinked with PBZ; superhydrophobicity was maintained after immersing in either acidic or alkaline aqueous solutions for 24 h; superhydrophobicity was maintained within 350 °C; high salt tolerance; good recyclability after 20 separation cycles; oil content in the permeate below 5 ppm | [ |
| PVA | PTFE NPs | Superhydrophobic and superoleophilic | Chloroform/water | 1:1 volume ratio | Gravity-driven | 1215 | - | Tensile strength was as high as 19.7 MPa compared with pristine PVA-PTFE at 7.5 MPa; superhydrophobicity was maintained after exposure to both acidic and alkaline solution for 2 h, and after 30 cycles of abrasion test. | [ |
| PAN | Ag, Cu nanocluster | Superhydrophobic and superoleophilic | Heavy oil mixture: | 1:1 volume ratio | Gravity-driven | - | >99.40 b>98.50 c | The PAN-Cu-Sh-120 membrane exhibited WCA greater than 150° after immersed in different NaCl concentration solutions for up to 7 days; no change in weight before and after ultrasonic treatment which indicated the adhesion strength of copper nanocluster to PAN was strong; elongation at break decreased from 26.07 to 11.79% after electroless deposition Cu. | [ |
| PP | PDA/APTES | Superhydrophilic and underwater | Petroleum ether/water | 50:50 volume ratio | Gravity-driven | 186,477.5 | >99 d | PDA created nano-scale roughness on the fiber; APTES improved the adhesion or interactions between the PDA coatings and PP; breaking elongation reduced from 52% to 36% when the basis weight of PP membrane increased. | [ |
| PP | TiO2 | Hydrophobic and superlipophilic | Kerosene/water | 1:1 volume ratio | Gravity-driven | 14,789–15,410 | 95–98 | TiO2 enhanced the thermostability of PP; thermal decomposition temperature was proportional to the content of TiO2 which the temperatures were 180–230 °C; remained stable after 6 h ultraviolet irradiation; retained the oil/water separation capability even after 100 repeated test. | [ |
| PP | TP/APTES | Superhydrophilic and underwater superoleophobic | n-hexane/water | 1:1 volume ratio | Gravity-driven | ~110,000 | >99.1 | The | [ |
a Continuous filtration flux. b Separation efficiency of heavy oil/water mixture calculated based on Equation (3). c Separation efficiency of light oil/water mixture calculated based on Equation (3). d Separation efficiency was calculated based on Equation (4). PVDF: Polyvinylidene fluoride; P(MMA-r-FDMA): Poly(methyl methacrylate-random-perfluorodecyl methacrylate); PI: Polyimide; PBZ: Polybenzoxazine; PVA: Polyvinyl alcohol; PTFE: Polytetrafluoroethylene; TP: Tea polyphenols; WCA: Water contact angle; OCA: Oil contact angle; UWOCA: Underwater oil contact angle; SA: Sliding angle; SNPs: Silica nanoparticles; NPs: Nanoparticles; APTES: (3-Aminopropyl)triethoxysilane.
Application of nanomaterials in the nanofiber membranes for oil/water emulsion separation.
| Base Polymer | Nanomaterials | Wettability | Oil/Water System | Oil Content in Water | Filtration Mode | Findings | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAN | Single-walled CNTs | Switchable hydrophobic and hydrophilic | Petroleum ether/water | 1:9 volume ratio | Vacuum driven at −0.07 MPa | ~55,000 | 99.96 | Hydrophobic CNT side and hydrophilic PAN side. | [ |
| PVDF | SNPs | Hydrophobic and oleophilic | Octane/water | 500–2000 mg/L | Dead-end, 0–10 kPa | - | 97.95 | Exhibited excellent performances in oil-water separation for the flow velocities below 1.98 m/min; surface roughness and pores increased the probability of droplets capture by interception and collision. | [ |
| N6 | SNPs | Superhydrophilic and underwater oleophobic | Machine/water + SDS | 250–1000 mg/L | Dead-end stirred cell filtration, 4 psi | 4814 a | >98.80 | SNPs increased the surface roughness from 193 to 285 nm; incorporation of SNPs enhanced the tensile strength to 22.48 MPa due to the integrated network structure; strong interaction between the N6 nanofiber and PVAc coat maintained the stability after permeation with acidic and alkaline solutions for 3 h. | [ |
| PVDF | PDA and TiO2 | Superhydrophilic and underwater superoleophobic | Diesel oil/water | 1:100 volume ratio + 0.2 mg/ml SDS | Vacuum filtration, ΔP at 0.09 MPa | 785 | 99.52 | The modified membrane exhibited excellent stability under acidic, salty and physical stress; PDA disintegrated in a strongly alkaline environment; superhydrophlicity maintained and no loss of NPs even after strong shear flow at 30°C for 30 days. | [ |
| PAN | Electrospun PS | Hydrophobic | Hexane/water | 1 mL hexane in 99 mL deionized water, 0.1 wt% SDS | Gravity-driven | 209–1841 b | - | Emulsion flux of J-ENMs was 1.7 times higher than that of single layer PAN NF; PS concentrations affected emulsion fluxes. | [ |
| PAN | Ag, ZnO | Superhydrophilic and underwater superoleophobic | Soybean oil/water | 1% soybean oil mixed with 20 mg/L cationic dye or anionic dye | Gravity-driven | 619 | >99.7 | Micro/nano sized hierarchical structure greatly increased the roughness; strong resistance to different pH solutions, organic solvents and salt solutions for 24 h with WCA and UWOCA maintained; | [ |
| PAN | Au | Superhydrophobic and underwater superoleophilic | Chloroform/water | 6 ml chloroform in 0.54 g Tween 80 and 54 mL water | Gravity-driven | - | 97.8 d | Separation efficiency maintained at 85% after 16 cycles of separation; | [ |
| PAN | TiO2 | Superhydrophilic and superoleophobic | Petroleum ether/water | 1:1000 weight ratio with 0.1 mg/mL Tween 80 in water | Gravity-driven, 0.01 bar | 600–2000 | 99 | Emulsion property such as viscosity affected the separation efficiency; no obvious decline of permeation; robust recyclability; soybean emulsion flux decreased quickly with time because the oil drop size was smaller. | [ |
| PAN | PDA | Superhydrophilic and underwater superoleophobic | Toluene/water | 3.0 ml in 0.03 g SLS and 297 mL deionized water | Gravity-driven | 11,666 ± 978 e | 99.9 | Micro/nano-spehres formed in the PAN-PDAc; permeability of PAN-PDAc NF was about 2.7 times of the pristine PAN; initial permeability of PAN-PDAc was 23.3% higher than PAN; the permeability after 2 h in PAN-PDAc was 174.8% higher than PAN. | [ |
| PP | TA/DA/PEI | Superhydrophilic and underwater uperoleophobic | 1,2-dichloroethane/water | 10 mL in 990 mL deionized water with 20 mg Tween-80 | Gravity-driven | - | 99.8 | Mussel-inspired hydrophilic structure; tannin-inspired coating used to improve the adhesion; oil droplets form filter cake and block the pores on the surface; | [ |
| PET | Electrospun PVDF NF | Hydrophobic and lipophilic | Hexadecane/water | Concentration of oils ranged from 500 to 2000 mg/L | Dead-end filtration | - | ~99 | [ |
a Permeability measured in unit L/m2 h bar. b Pure water flux. c Emulsion flux. d Separation efficiency calculated based on Equation (4). e Permeability in unit L/m2 h bar. PAN: Polyacrylonitrile; PVDF: Polyvinylidene fluoride; N6: Nylon 6; PVAc: Polyvinyl acetate; PDA: Polydopamine; PS: Polystyrene; DA: Dopamine; PEI: Polyethyleneimine; PET: Polyester. WCA: Water contact angle; OCA: Oil contact angle; UWOCA: Underwater oil contact angle; UOWCA: Under oil water contact angle; SNPs: Silica nanoparticles; NPs: Nanoparticles; CNTs: Carbon nanotubes; SDS: Sodium dodecyl sulfate; SLS: Sodium laurylsulfonate; NF: Nanofiber.