10 research outputs found
Nanofilament-Coated Superhydrophobic Membranes Show Enhanced Flux and Fouling Resistance in Membrane Distillation
Membrane distillation
(MD) is an important technique for brine
desalination and wastewater treatment that may utilize waste or solar
heat. To increase the distillation rate and minimize membrane wetting
and fouling, we deposit a layer of polysiloxane nanofilaments on microporous
membranes. In this way, composite membranes with multiscale pore sizes
are created. The performance of these membranes in the air gap and
direct contact membrane distillation was investigated in the presence
of salt solutions, solutions containing bovine serum albumin, and
solutions containing the surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate. In comparison
to conventional hydrophobic membranes, our multiscale porous membranes
exhibit superior fouling resistance while attaining a higher distillation
flux without using fluorinated compounds. This study demonstrates
a viable method for optimizing MD processes for wastewater and saltwater
treatment
Tunable Water Harvesting Surfaces Consisting of Biphilic Nanoscale Topography
Water scarcity has become a global
issue of severe concern. Great
efforts have been undertaken to develop low-cost and highly efficient
condensation strategies to relieve water shortages in arid regions.
However, the rationale for design of an ideal condensing surface remains
lacking due to the conflicting requirements for water nucleation and
transport. In this work, we demonstrate that a biphilic nanoscale
topography created by a scalable surface engineering method can achieve
an ultraefficient water harvesting performance. With hydrophilic nanobumps
on top of a superhydrophobic substrate, this biphilic topography combines
the merits of biological surfaces with distinct wetting features (e.g.,
fog-basking beetles and water-repellent lotus), which enables a tunable
water nucleation phenomenon, in contrast to the random condensation
mode on their counterparts. By adjusting the contrasting wetting features,
the characteristic water nucleation spacing can be tuned to balance
the nucleation enhancement and water transport to cope with various
environments. Guided by our nucleation density model, we show an optimal
biphilic topography by tuning the nanoscale hydrophilic structure
density, which allows an ∼349% water collection rate and ∼184%
heat transfer coefficient as compared to the state-of-the-art superhydrophobic
surface in a moisture-lacking atmosphere, offering a very promising
strategy for improving the efficiency of water harvesting in drought
areas
Tunable Water Harvesting Surfaces Consisting of Biphilic Nanoscale Topography
Water scarcity has become a global
issue of severe concern. Great
efforts have been undertaken to develop low-cost and highly efficient
condensation strategies to relieve water shortages in arid regions.
However, the rationale for design of an ideal condensing surface remains
lacking due to the conflicting requirements for water nucleation and
transport. In this work, we demonstrate that a biphilic nanoscale
topography created by a scalable surface engineering method can achieve
an ultraefficient water harvesting performance. With hydrophilic nanobumps
on top of a superhydrophobic substrate, this biphilic topography combines
the merits of biological surfaces with distinct wetting features (e.g.,
fog-basking beetles and water-repellent lotus), which enables a tunable
water nucleation phenomenon, in contrast to the random condensation
mode on their counterparts. By adjusting the contrasting wetting features,
the characteristic water nucleation spacing can be tuned to balance
the nucleation enhancement and water transport to cope with various
environments. Guided by our nucleation density model, we show an optimal
biphilic topography by tuning the nanoscale hydrophilic structure
density, which allows an ∼349% water collection rate and ∼184%
heat transfer coefficient as compared to the state-of-the-art superhydrophobic
surface in a moisture-lacking atmosphere, offering a very promising
strategy for improving the efficiency of water harvesting in drought
areas
Recurrent Filmwise and Dropwise Condensation on a Beetle Mimetic Surface
Vapor condensation plays a key role in a wide range of industrial applications including power generation, thermal management, water harvesting and desalination. Fast droplet nucleation and efficient droplet departure as well as low interfacial thermal resistance are important factors that determine the thermal performances of condensation; however, these properties have conflicting requirements on the structural roughness and surface chemistry of the condensing surface or condensation modes (<i>e.g.</i>, filmwise <i>vs</i> dropwise). Despite intensive efforts over the past few decades, almost all studies have focused on the dropwise condensation enabled by superhydrophobic surfaces. In this work, we report the development of a bioinspired hybrid surface with high wetting contrast that allows for seamless integration of filmwise and dropwise condensation modes. We show that the synergistic cooperation in the observed recurrent condensation modes leads to improvements in all aspects of heat transfer properties including droplet nucleation density, growth rate, and self-removal, as well as overall heat transfer coefficient. Moreover, we propose an analytical model to optimize the surface morphological features for dramatic heat transfer enhancement
Tunable Water Harvesting Surfaces Consisting of Biphilic Nanoscale Topography
Water scarcity has become a global
issue of severe concern. Great
efforts have been undertaken to develop low-cost and highly efficient
condensation strategies to relieve water shortages in arid regions.
However, the rationale for design of an ideal condensing surface remains
lacking due to the conflicting requirements for water nucleation and
transport. In this work, we demonstrate that a biphilic nanoscale
topography created by a scalable surface engineering method can achieve
an ultraefficient water harvesting performance. With hydrophilic nanobumps
on top of a superhydrophobic substrate, this biphilic topography combines
the merits of biological surfaces with distinct wetting features (e.g.,
fog-basking beetles and water-repellent lotus), which enables a tunable
water nucleation phenomenon, in contrast to the random condensation
mode on their counterparts. By adjusting the contrasting wetting features,
the characteristic water nucleation spacing can be tuned to balance
the nucleation enhancement and water transport to cope with various
environments. Guided by our nucleation density model, we show an optimal
biphilic topography by tuning the nanoscale hydrophilic structure
density, which allows an ∼349% water collection rate and ∼184%
heat transfer coefficient as compared to the state-of-the-art superhydrophobic
surface in a moisture-lacking atmosphere, offering a very promising
strategy for improving the efficiency of water harvesting in drought
areas
Tunable Water Harvesting Surfaces Consisting of Biphilic Nanoscale Topography
Water scarcity has become a global
issue of severe concern. Great
efforts have been undertaken to develop low-cost and highly efficient
condensation strategies to relieve water shortages in arid regions.
However, the rationale for design of an ideal condensing surface remains
lacking due to the conflicting requirements for water nucleation and
transport. In this work, we demonstrate that a biphilic nanoscale
topography created by a scalable surface engineering method can achieve
an ultraefficient water harvesting performance. With hydrophilic nanobumps
on top of a superhydrophobic substrate, this biphilic topography combines
the merits of biological surfaces with distinct wetting features (e.g.,
fog-basking beetles and water-repellent lotus), which enables a tunable
water nucleation phenomenon, in contrast to the random condensation
mode on their counterparts. By adjusting the contrasting wetting features,
the characteristic water nucleation spacing can be tuned to balance
the nucleation enhancement and water transport to cope with various
environments. Guided by our nucleation density model, we show an optimal
biphilic topography by tuning the nanoscale hydrophilic structure
density, which allows an ∼349% water collection rate and ∼184%
heat transfer coefficient as compared to the state-of-the-art superhydrophobic
surface in a moisture-lacking atmosphere, offering a very promising
strategy for improving the efficiency of water harvesting in drought
areas
A super liquid-repellent hierarchical porous membrane for efficient water desalination
Source data of Figures 1-6 of the manuscript on a novel type of superhydrophobic membranes for membrane distillation, based on nanofilament coatings
Controllable Formation of Monodisperse Polymer Microbubbles as Ultrasound Contrast Agents
Microbubbles
have been widely used as ultrasound contrast agents
in clinical diagnosis and hold great potential for ultrasound-mediated
therapy. However, polydispersed population and short half-life time
(<10 min) of the microbubbles still limit their applications in
imaging and therapy. To tackle these problems, we develop a microfluidic
flow-focusing approach to produce monodisperse microbubbles stabilized
by Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) as the polymer shell. The
size of PLGA microbubbles can be tightly controlled from ∼600
nm to ∼7 μm with a coefficient of variation less than
4% in size distribution for ensuring highly homogeneous echogenic
behavior of PLGA polymer microbubbles in ultrasound fields. Both in
vitro and in vivo experiments showed that the monodisperse PLGA microbubbles
had excellent echogenicity and elongated sonographic duration time
(>3 times) for ultrasound imaging in comparison with the commercial
lipid microbubbles
Plasma-Induced Superhydrophobicity as a Green Technology for Enhanced Air Gap Membrane Distillation
Superhydrophobicity has only recently become a requirement
in membrane
fabrication and modification. Superhydrophobic membranes have shown
improved flux performance and scaling resistance in long-term membrane
distillation (MD) operations compared to simply hydrophobic membranes.
Here, we introduce plasma micro- and nanotexturing followed by plasma
deposition as a novel, dry, and green method for superhydrophobic
membrane fabrication. Using plasma micro- and nanotexturing, commercial
membranes, both hydrophobic and hydrophilic, are transformed to superhydrophobic
featuring water static contact angles (WSCA) greater than 150°
and contact angle hysteresis lower than 10°. To this direction,
hydrophobic polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and hydrophilic cellulose
acetate (CA) membranes are transformed to superhydrophobic. The superhydrophobic
PTFE membranes showed enhanced water flux in standard air gap membrane
distillation and more stable performance compared to the commercial
ones for at least 48 h continuous operation, with salt rejection >99.99%.
Additionally, their performance and high salt rejection remained stable,
when low surface tension solutions containing sodium dodecyl sulfate
(SDS) and NaCl (down to 35 mN/m) were used, showcasing their antiwetting
properties. The improved performance is attributed to superhydrophobicity
and increased pore size after plasma micro- and nanotexturing. More
importantly, CA membranes, which are initially unsuitable for MD due
to their hydrophilic nature (WSCA ≈ 40°), showed excellent
performance with stable flux and salt rejection >99.2% again for
at
least 48 h, demonstrating the effectiveness of the proposed method
for wetting control in membranes regardless of their initial wetting
properties
