DOI: 10.3390/pr14121998 ISSN: 2227-9717

Preparation of a SiO2@PDA/CS Coated Stainless Steel Mesh with Superhydrophilicity and Underwater Superoleophobicity for Oil–Water Separation

Zhuangzhuang Zhang, Lingling Ma, Yang Shao, Diandou Xu, Min Luo

To tackle the environmental challenges associated with industrial oily wastewater discharges and recurrent marine oil spill incidents, developing high-efficiency oil–water separation technologies represents a pressing environmental challenge. This research presents a novel design approach comprising the deposition of a stable SiO2 anchoring layer followed by the fabrication of a PDA/CS crosslinked coating, thereby achieving successful construction of a superhydrophilic/underwater superoleophobic (SH/UWSO) coating on stainless steel meshes (SSM). In the first step, SiO2 microspheres were deposited via vapor deposition to create a micro-rough surface architecture. Subsequently, a dopamine/chitosan (DA/CS) reaction solution was introduced to form a Polydopamine/chitosan (PDA/CS) coating, yielding a SiO2@PDA/CS-SSM separation membrane. The resulting membrane exhibited separation efficiencies surpassing 99% for various oil–water mixtures, achieving a flux of 1.24 × 105 L·m−2·h−1 in petroleum ether systems. Notably, the membrane maintained high efficiency and structural stability even after 25 separation cycles, immersion in strong acid and base solutions for 72 h, and 100 abrasion tests. The rational design of the anchoring and crosslinking layers endows SiO2@PDA/CS-SSM with high efficiency and stability, making it an effective oil–water separation material.

More from our Archive