A serial wedge-shaped wettability pattern is designed to achieve long-distance spontaneous and directional pumpless transportation of subaqueous gas bubbles.
Superhydrophobic
filtrating materials have been widely developed
for rapid removal or collection of oils from oil/water mixture due
to the increasing water pollution caused by oil spills and oil-contaminated
wastewater. However, poor reusability, superhydrophobic failure in
harsh environments, and that only heavy oil or light oil was separated
from water seriously restricted their practical application. Herein,
superhydrophobic carbon fibers were first fabricated using a novel
nickel electroplating for versatile oil/water separation with excellent
reusability and high environmental stability. The interconnected nanometer-scale
nickel grains formed on the micrometer-scale fibers and fluoroalkylsilane
molecules enabled the fibers to be superhydrophobic with the water
contact angle (CA) of ∼159.1° and superoleophilic with
the oil CA of ∼0°. The nickel coating contributed to the
improvement of the bonding strength, tensile strength, and oxidation
resistance of the fibers. The as-prepared fibers could be applied
for the separation of heavy or light oil/water mixtures with separation
efficiencies above 99.1%, during which the oil content in the separated
water all remained below 78 ppm. The fibers also realized the highly
efficient separation of dichloromethane and various harsh environmental
solutions such as hot water, acid, alkali, and salt. The superhydrophobicity
of the fluorinated nickel-coated carbon fibers still remained even
after 100 cycles of separation and 24 months of storage in air, demonstrating
outstanding durability of the fibers. These novel superhydrophobic
carbon fibers had promising potentials for versatile oil/water separation
in practical applications.
Pumpless
and directed gas transportation in aqueous environments
has promising application prospects in various domains. So far, researches
on gas transportation based on superaerophilic channels are limited
to the transportation of fewer bubbles with low transportation velocity.
How to enhance the transportation velocity and realize the transportation
of a large quantity of bubbles (especially for gas jet) for practical
applications remain unclear. Here, a half-open wedge-shaped channel
with subaqueous superaerophilicity is fabricated, which demonstrates
excellent bubble affinity and can realize the pumpless and directed
bubble transportation. It is proposed that a Laplace force is the
main driving force during the transportation and the magnitude of
the force is influenced by both the wedge angle of the channel and
geometric parameters of the bubble whereas the direction of the force
is determined by the orientation of the channel. By applying a precovered
air film on the subaqueous superaerophilic wedge-shaped channel, bubbles
demonstrate a higher transportation velocity. Additionally, the prepared
channel shows an outstanding affinity to oxygen jet at high flux,
which can be utilized to transport oxygen for continuous subaqueous
oxygen supplementation.
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