Abstract

Developing filtering materials with high permeation flux and contaminant removal rate is of great importance for oily wastewater remediation. Herein, a robust three-dimensional (3D) activated carbon fibers (ACFs) based composite with uniformly grown layered double hydroxide (LDH) on the surface was successfully constructed through a feasible hydrothermal strategy. The LDH with a high surface energy and vertically aligned structure could provide superhydrophilicity to ACFs. Systematic investigation confirmed that the 3D material could overcome the size mismatch between the ACFs macropores and tiny emulsified droplets through the combination of size-sieving filtration on the surface and oil droplet coalescence in the fiber network. This process efficiently separated the intractable surfactant-stabilized oil-in-water emulsions with high permeation flux (up to 4.16 × 106 L m−2 h−1 bar−1). Notably, the LDH also had well-dispersed catalytic active sites, which could initiate advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) to efficiently eliminate various types of water-soluble organic pollutants (e.g., pharmaceuticals, phenolic compounds and organic dyes). The resulting modified ACFs exhibited exceptional removal rates for both oil and organic pollutants in the complex sewage during the continuous filtration process. These versatile abilities integrated with the facile preparation method reported herein provide outstanding prospects for the large-scale treatment of oily wastewater.

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