Projects per year
Abstract
Manipulating the surface energy and thereby the wetting properties of solids, has tremendous potential for various physical, chemical, biological as well as industrial processes. Typically, this is achieved by either chemical modification or by controlling the hierarchical structures of surfaces. Here we report a phenomenon whereby the wetting properties of vermiculite laminates are controlled by the hydrated cations on the surface and in the interlamellar space. We find that vermiculite laminates can be tuned from superhydrophilic to hydrophobic simply by exchanging the cations; hydrophilicity decreases with increasing cation hydration free energy, except for lithium. The lithium‐exchanged vermiculite laminate is found to provide a superhydrophilic surface due to its anomalous hydrated structure at the vermiculite surface. Building on these findings, we demonstrate the potential application of superhydrophilic lithium exchanged vermiculite as a thin coating layer on microfiltration membranes to resist fouling, and thus, we address a major challenge for oil‐water separation technology.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Journal | Nature Communications |
Early online date | 27 Feb 2020 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 27 Feb 2020 |
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Cation controlled wetting properties of vermiculite membranes and its promise for fouling resistant oil‐water separation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
-
Graphene-based membranes
Budd, P. (PI), Carbone, P. (CoI), Casiraghi, C. (CoI), Grieve, B. (CoI), Haigh, S. (CoI), Holmes, S. (CoI), Jivkov, A. (CoI), Kinloch, I. (CoI), Raveendran Nair, R. (CoI), Schroeder, S. (CoI), Siperstein, F. (CoI) & Vijayaraghavan, A. (CoI)
1/07/13 → 30/06/18
Project: Research
Equipment
-
Hard X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (HAXPES)
Spencer, B. (Senior Technical Specialist) & Flavell, W. (Academic lead)
Faculty of Science and EngineeringFacility/equipment: Facility