Iranian Journal of Physics Research (Feb 2020)
Hydrophobic and oleophilic cotton fabrics for efficient oil-water separation through low-pressure plasma polymerization
Abstract
In recent years, the increase of industrial effluents in the petrochemical sector, in particular, the leakage of oil and the draining of industrial effluents in rivers, has created serious environmental hazards and huge economic losses in the world. In the past decade, the use of hydrophobic and oleophilic fabrics has been considered as a way to clean up contaminants through the absorption and separation of pollutants from industrial effluents. In this research, the low-pressure plasma polymerization method based on eco-friendly materials like Polydimethylsiloxane was used to fabricate hydrophobic and oleophilic cotton fabric. Also a low-pressure oxygen plasma pre-treatment was performed before plasma polymerization to improve bonding between created layer and cotton fabric Contact angle test and absorption capacity test was used to represent hydrophobicity of coated fabric and to measure the absorbance ability of different oils. Also scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to observe morphological changes on the surface of cotton fibers and Infrared Fourier transform (FTIR-ATR) spectroscopy to detect the chemical bonds created on the surface of fibers. Water-oil separation efficiency test and laundering test have been conducted to determine the separation rate and to represent durability of coated cotton, respectively. The water contact angle of coated cotton fabric was 143±3 and approximately this high hydrophobicity behavior remained after 10 cycle laundering. Also SEM results showed that the surface of fibers was covered by a random distribution of several microscale structures or a hierarchical surface structure like the lotus leaf. Our Water-oil separation tests demonstrated that coated fabrics had separation efficiency between 80 until 100 percent for most of the industrial oil, even after 15 cycles at 250 c and 900 c. These results indicate that coated cotton fabrics with plasma polymerization method has a high potential for application in water-oil separation and selective oil absorption. The fabrics are promising for the development an environmental friendly and recyclable separation of oil from water.