How to Separating finely mixed oil and water
Separating finely mixed oil and water
Membrane developed by MIT researchers can separate even highly
mixed fine oil-spill residues.
DEEPAK KUMAR, MIT News
Office
July 1, 2014
July 1, 2014
Whenever there is a
major spill of oil into water, the two tend to mix into a suspension of tiny
droplets, called an emulsion, that is extremely hard to separate — and that can
cause severe damage to ecosystems. But MIT researchers have discovered a new,
inexpensive way of getting the two fluids apart again.
Their newly developed
membrane could be manufactured at industrial scale, and could process large
quantities of the finely mixed materials back into pure oil and water. The
process is described in the journal Scientific Reports by MIT professor Kripa
Varanasi, graduate student Brian Solomon, and postdoc M. Nasim Hyder.
In addition to its
possible role in cleaning up spills, the new method could also be used for
routine drilling, such as in the deep ocean as well as on land, where water is
injected into wells to help force oil out of deep rock formations. Typically,
Varanasi explains, the mixed oil and water that’s extracted is put in large
tanks to allow separation by gravity; the oil gradually floats to the top,
where it can be skimmed off.
That works well when
the oil and water are “already large globs of stuff, already partly separated,”
Varanasi says. “The difficulty comes when you have what is called an emulsion,
with very tiny droplets of oil stabilized in a water background, or water in an
oil background. The difficulty significantly increases for nanoemulsions, where
the drop sizes are below a micron.”
To break down those
emulsions, crews use de-emulsifiers, which can themselves be environmentally
damaging. In the 2010 Deep-water Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, for
example, large amounts of dispersants and de-emulsifiers were dumped into the
sea.
“After a while, [the
oil] just disappeared,” Varanasi says, “but people know it’s hidden in the
water, in these fine emulsions.” In the case of land-based drilling, where
so-called “produced water” from wells contains fine emulsions of oil, companies
sometimes simply dilute the water until it meets regulatory standards for being
discharged into waterways.
“It’s a problem that’s very challenging to the industry,”
Varanasi says, “both in terms of recovering the oil, and more importantly, not
discharging the produced water into the environment.”
The new approach
developed by Varanasi’s group uses membranes with hierarchical pore structures.
The membranes combine a very thin layer of Nano pores with a thicker layer of
micropores to limit the passage of unwanted material while providing strength
sufficient to withstand high pressure and throughput. The membranes can be made
with contrasting wetting properties so their pores either attract oil or repel
water, or vice versa.
“This allows one
material to pass while blocking the other with little flow resistance,”
Varanasi says. The choice of membrane, or a combination of both, could be based
on which material predominates in a particular situation, he explains.
The pores have to be
smaller than the droplets in order to block them, Varanasi says — which, in the
case of nanoemulsions, leads to very small pores and significant flow
resistance, limiting the throughput. Throughput can be improved by increasing
the pressure gradient or making the separation layer very thin, but past
attempts to make such thin, small-pore membranes have yielded materials that
tear even under nominal pressure. The team’s solution: an ingenious process
that makes large holes on one side that penetrate most of the way through the
material, providing little resistance to flow, as well as nanoscale holes on
the other surface, in contact with the emulsion to be separated. The thin layer
with nanoscale pores allows for separation, and the thick layer with large
pores provides mechanical support.
The approach can be
adapted to industrial processes used today for making large membranes in a
high-volume, roll-to-roll manufacturing system, so it should be relatively easy
to achieve large-scale production, Varanasi says.
A polymer solution is
poured onto a glass plate, Hyder explains; this casting plate is then immersed
in a nonsolvent bath to induce precipitation to form a film. The technique
creates a bilayer polymer phase: One layer is polymer-rich, and one is not. As
they precipitate out, the polymer-rich phase develops the smaller pores; the
polymer-lean phase makes the larger ones. Since the solutions form a single
sheet of film, there is no need for bonding layers together, which can result
in a weaker filter.
“There is no separate
layer, it’s completely integrated, so the mechanical support is integral,”
Hyder says. As a final stage, a different polymer is added to give the material
— including the lining of the pores — surfaces that attract or repel oil and
water. The skin layer thickness can be further optimized using polymeric pore
formers to enhance throughput.
Solomon performed
experiments showing the effectiveness of the membranes in separating
nanoemulsions while maintaining integrity at high pressure. The team used
various techniques — including differential scanning calorimetry, dynamic
light scattering, and microscopy — to test the separation efficiency, showing
more than 99.9 percent separation.
Microscopy images show
the membrane in operation, with dye added to the water to make the droplets
more obvious. Within seconds, an oil-water mixture that is heavily clouded
becomes perfectly clear, as the water passes through the membrane, leaving pure
oil behind. As shown in the microscope images, Solomon says, “We’re not only
getting rid of the droplets you can see, but also smaller ones,” which
contribute to the cloudy appearance.
Anish Tuteja, an
assistant professor of materials science and engineering at the University of
Michigan who was not involved in this research, calls it "a very
interesting and innovative approach to fabricating membranes that can separate
out nanoemulsions." He adds that the method this team used "is quite
innovative. People have previously attempted to fabricate hierarchical
membranes, but this is probably one of the simplest and most scalable
techniques for fabricating such membranes."
Assuming the membranes
perform well under real-world conditions, Tuteja says, "they could have a
very big impact. Oil-water nanoemulsions are ubiquitous in a number of
industries, and these membranes could enable rapid separation of those
emulsions with high purity and efficiency."
The team is working with Shell, which supported the research
through the MIT Energy Initiative, to further test the material.