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Now, `microsubmarines` to help clean up oil spills
Scientists have designed and successful tested the first self-propelled `microsubmarines` that can pick up droplets of oil from contaminated waters and transport them to collection facilities.
Washington: Scientists have designed and successful tested the first self-propelled “microsubmarines” that can pick up droplets of oil from contaminated waters and transport them to collection facilities.
They concluded that these tiny machines could play an important role in cleaning up oil spills, like the 2010 Deepwater Horizon incident in the Gulf of Mexico. Joseph Wang and colleagues explained that different versions of microengines have been developed, including devices that could transport medications through the bloodstream to diseased parts of the body.
But no one has ever shown that these devices — which are about 10 times smaller than the width of a human hair — could help clean up oil spills.
There is an urgent need for better ways of separating oil from water in the oceans and inside factories to avoid releasing oil-contaminated water to the environment.
Wang’s team developed so-called microsubmarines, which require very little fuel and move ultrafast, to see whether these small engines could help clean up oil.
Tests showed that the cone-shaped microsubmarines could collect droplets of olive oil and motor oil in water and transport them through the water.
The microsubs have a special surface coating, which makes them “superhydrophobic,” or extremely water-repellent and oil-absorbent. “These results demonstrate the potential of the superhydrophobic-modified microsubmarines for facile, rapid and highly efficient collection of oils in oil-contaminated water samples,” said the researchers.
The invention has been described in the journal ACS Nano.
ANI
They concluded that these tiny machines could play an important role in cleaning up oil spills, like the 2010 Deepwater Horizon incident in the Gulf of Mexico. Joseph Wang and colleagues explained that different versions of microengines have been developed, including devices that could transport medications through the bloodstream to diseased parts of the body.
But no one has ever shown that these devices — which are about 10 times smaller than the width of a human hair — could help clean up oil spills.
There is an urgent need for better ways of separating oil from water in the oceans and inside factories to avoid releasing oil-contaminated water to the environment.
Wang’s team developed so-called microsubmarines, which require very little fuel and move ultrafast, to see whether these small engines could help clean up oil.
Tests showed that the cone-shaped microsubmarines could collect droplets of olive oil and motor oil in water and transport them through the water.
The microsubs have a special surface coating, which makes them “superhydrophobic,” or extremely water-repellent and oil-absorbent. “These results demonstrate the potential of the superhydrophobic-modified microsubmarines for facile, rapid and highly efficient collection of oils in oil-contaminated water samples,” said the researchers.
The invention has been described in the journal ACS Nano.
ANI