Established in 2020 Wednesday, April 17, 2024


Oil-capturing technology offers 10x improvement cleaning up hazardous spills
Non-contact induction heating applied to the roller’s top layer supercharges the reaction that separates oil from water. Image courtesy: University of Texas at Austin.



AUSTIN, TX.- To combat the extreme environmental toll of major oil spills, researchers at The University of Texas at Austin have created a technology that could significantly improve cleanup capabilities compared with current methods.

The new technology uses a dual-layer mesh roller coupled with an induction heating technique, with material properties that allow it to separate oil from water and then remove that oil from the ocean with high efficiency and throughput. In experiments, the researchers showed the potential to retrieve up to 1,400 kilograms of viscous oil per square meter per hour, which is about 10 times better than the way oil is cleaned up today.

"When you have a widespread oil spill in the ocean, it slowly diffuses into the water, so how quickly and efficiently you can retrieve the oil has a major impact on the marine environment," said Guihua Yu, a professor of materials science in the Cockrell School of Engineering's Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering and Texas Materials Institute.

The findings were published in Nature Sustainability.

In practice, the rollers could be built to different sizes to deal with oil spills. Boats would pull them across a spill area, where they could complete cleanup operations in a day or two, compared with the weekslong efforts that current techniques require.

Oil's viscous nature makes it challenging to separate from water. The gel-coated mesh roller can selectively adhere oil at the interface of the cold seawater on the bottom side and separate viscous oil/water mixtures at the top side of the roller. Then, a device in between the two layers captures the now-separated oil.

The researchers applied non-contact induction heating to the top layer of the roller to supercharge the reaction that separates oil from water. In experiments, the researchers achieved over 99% oil-water separation efficiency. That means the collected oil could also be recycled and reused.

Yu's research has touched on other areas of sustainability, such as generating gels that can pull water from the air and significant improvements to soil and farming practices. He said he was inspired to pursue this research by the Deepwater Horizon spill. The 2010 incident off the Gulf Coast was the largest U.S. oil spill in history, with more than 100 million gallons of oil leaked, forever altering the ecosystem there. Crews tried different ways to clean up the spill, but the impact remains present to this day, with some estimates indicating only about a quarter of the oil was recovered.

This got Yu thinking about oil spill cleanup technology. He looked at commonly used cleanup methods, such as skimmers, and what he found was a major need for a modernized way to efficiently pull oil out of water with much higher throughput.

"Most of the methods in use today rely on decades-old technology," Yu said. "I just thought we should be able to do better than that."

Up next, the researchers will focus on scaling the technology. They are open to working with industrial partners on scaling and field tests.







Today's News

September 10, 2023

First device to monitor transplanted organs detects early signs of rejection

Minimizing fallout from explosive cell death could slow inflammation, cancer spread

Novel device combines nanopores with electronic signals for disease detection

Chinese paleontologists find new fossil link in bird evolution

Contours that kill: Geometry influences prey capture in carnivorous pitcher plants

Human embryo models grown from stem cells

CAR T-cell therapy without side effects? Researchers show results in preclinical models

The sense of order that distinguishes humans from other animals

Oil-capturing technology offers 10x improvement cleaning up hazardous spills

Sports and physical exercise require mental effort, even in elite athletes

3D genome analysis reveals secrets to antibody diversity

Researchers confirm furthest ever detection of a galaxy's magnetic field

Online AI-based test for Parkinson's disease severity shows promising results

Structure formation during freeze casting filmed in 3D and real time

Mammalian mitochondrial translation requires fidelity mediated by proofreading function of threonyl-tRNA synthetase

New details revealed about the life cycle of an unusual class of stars

West Antarctic ice sheet has not reached its tipping point towards irreversible collapse - yet, new research finds

Warming trends will likely result in major disturbances of networks of forest fungi



 


Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez



Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the ResearchNews newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful