Recent Progress in Superhydrophilic Carbon-Based Composite Membranes for Oil/Water Emulsion Separation

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2021 Aug 11;13(31):36679-36696. doi: 10.1021/acsami.1c07737. Epub 2021 Aug 2.

Abstract

The purification of stabilized oil/water emulsions is essential to meet the ever increasing demand for monitoring water in the environment, which has been addressed with superwetting carbon-based separation membranes. These include superhydrophilic carbon-based membranes whose progress in recent years and perspectives are reviewed in this paper. The membrane construction strategy is organized into four parts, vacuum-assisted self-assembly, sol-gel process, electrospinning, and vacuum-assisted filtration. In each section, the design strategies and their responding disadvantages have been comprehensively discussed. The challenges and prospects concerning the superhydrophilic carbon-based separation membranes for oily wastewater purification are also summarized to arouse researchers to carry out more studies.

Keywords: O/W emulsion separation; carbon-based composite membrane; function integration; membrane construction strategy; superwettability.