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Recycling Polymeric Solid Wastes for Energy-Efficient Water Purification, Organic Distillation, and Oil Spill Cleanup

Authors
Gong, FengLi, HaoYuan, XiangzhouHuang, JigangXia, DaweiPapavassiliou, Dimitrios V.Xiao, RuiYamauchi, YusukeWu, Kevin C. -W.Ok, Yong Sik
Issue Date
Nov-2021
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
Keywords
pollution remediation; polymeric waste; recycling; sustainable development; water-energy-waste nexus
Citation
SMALL, v.17, no.46
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
SMALL
Volume
17
Number
46
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/137653
DOI
10.1002/smll.202102459
ISSN
1613-6810
Abstract
Conventional approaches (e.g., pyrolysis) for managing waste polymer foams typically require highly technical skills and consume large amounts of energy resources. This paper presents an ultrafacile, cost-effective, and highly efficient alternative method for recycling waste packaging and cleaning foam (e.g., polymelamine-formaldehyde foam). The designed solar absorber, a polypyrrole-coated melamine foam (PMF), features a highly porous structure, excellent mechanical strength, low thermal conductivity, and rapid water transport capacity. These exceptional properties render the PMF suitable for multiple applications, including energy-efficient solar-powered water purification, ethanol distillation, and oil absorption. In water purification, the PMF yields a solar-thermal conversion efficiency as high as 87.7%, stability that is maintained for more than 35 operation cycles, and antifouling capabilities (when purifying different water types). In solar distillation, the PMF achieves a concentration increase up to 75 vol% when distilling a 10 vol% ethanol solution. In oil absorption, the PMF offers an oil-absorption capacity of approximate to 70 g g(-1) with only a 7% loss in capacity after 100 absorbing-squeezing cycles. Thus, systems combining solar energy with various waste foams are highly promising as durable, renewable, and portable systems for water purification, organic distillation, and oil absorption, especially in remote regions or emergency situations.
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College of Life Sciences and Biotechnology > Division of Environmental Science and Ecological Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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