Study of oil sorption behavior of filled and structured fiber assemblies made from polypropylene, kapok and milkweed fibers

被引:176
作者
Rengasamy, R. S. [1 ]
Das, Dipayan [1 ]
Karan, C. Praba [1 ]
机构
[1] Indian Inst Technol, Dept Text Technol, Delhi 110016, India
关键词
Polypropylene; Kapok; Milkweed; High density oil; Diesel oil; Sorption capacity; PENTANDRA L. GAERTN; SORBENT; REMOVAL;
D O I
10.1016/j.jhazmat.2010.11.031
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This article reports on oil sorption behavior of fiber assemblies made up of single natural and synthetic fibers as well as blend of natural and synthetic fibers when tested with high density oil and diesel oil. A series of filled fiber assemblies were prepared from 100% polypropylene, kapok, and milkweed fibers and another series of bonded structured fiber assemblies were prepared from a 70/30 blend of kapok and polypropylene fibers and a 70/30 blend of milkweed and polypropylene fibers. It was observed that the porosity of the fiber assemblies played a very important role in determining its oil sorption capacity. The polypropylene fiber assembly exhibited the highest sorption capacity (g/g) followed by the kapok and milkweed fiber assemblies at porosity < 0.98. At higher porosities (above 0.98). polypropylene filled fiber assembly has poor sorption capacity due to large sized inter fiber pore. The kapok and milkweed fibers have intra fiber porosities of 0.81 and 0.83, respectively. All the fiber assemblies showed higher oil sorption capacity with the high density oil as compared to the diesel oil. As the kapok and milkweed fiber have low cellulose content, hence their slow degradation is an advantage in fresh and marine water applications. The good sorption capacity of kapok and milkweed fiber assemblies along with their biodegradable nature offer great scope for structuring them into fiber assemblies with large porosity and uniform pores to have efficient oil sorbents. (c) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:526 / 532
页数:7
相关论文
共 24 条
[1]   Physicochemical and sorption characteristics of Malaysian Ceiba pentandra (L.) Gaertn. as a natural oil sorbent [J].
Abdullah, M. A. ;
Rahmah, Anisa Ur ;
Man, Z. .
JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, 2010, 177 (1-3) :683-691
[2]   Infrared and 13C MAS nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic study of acetylation of cotton [J].
Adebajo, MO ;
Frost, RL .
SPECTROCHIMICA ACTA PART A-MOLECULAR AND BIOMOLECULAR SPECTROSCOPY, 2004, 60 (1-2) :449-453
[3]   Experimental investigation of various vegetable fibers as sorbent materials for oil spills [J].
Annunciado, TR ;
Sydenstricker, THD ;
Amico, SC .
MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2005, 50 (11) :1340-1346
[4]  
Ansari I. A., 2003, J TEXT I, V94, P1, DOI DOI 10.1080/00405000308630590
[5]  
Azzam R.A., 2008, INT J ENERGY ENV, V2, P56
[6]   Evaluation of Butyl Rubber as Sorbent Material for the Removal of Oil and Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons from Seawater [J].
Ceylan, Deniz ;
Dogu, Saadet ;
Karacik, Burak ;
Yakan, Sevil D. ;
Okay, Oya S. ;
Okay, Oguz .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2009, 43 (10) :3846-3852
[7]   OIL SORPTION BEHAVIOR OF VARIOUS SORBENTS STUDIED BY SORPTION CAPACITY MEASUREMENT AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCANNING ELECTRON-MICROSCOPY [J].
CHOI, HM ;
MOREAU, JP .
MICROSCOPY RESEARCH AND TECHNIQUE, 1993, 25 (5-6) :447-455
[8]   MECHANICAL CHARACTERIZATION AND BEHAVIOR IN SPINNING PROCESSING OF MILKWEED FIBERS [J].
DREAN, JYF ;
PATRY, JJ ;
LOMBARD, GF ;
WELTROWSKI, M .
TEXTILE RESEARCH JOURNAL, 1993, 63 (08) :443-450
[9]  
FEI J, 2009, J HAZARD MATER, V164, P1346
[10]  
GAIN LL, 1987, TEXT RES J, V57, P339