Abstract

In recent years, spills of petroleum and organic chemicals have frequently occurred during their transportation at sea, which has caused serious pollution for water resources. In view of this, a superhydrophobic PU/CB@FAS sponge with excellent photothermal conversion performance was prepared, and its microscopic morphology and wettability were investigated in this paper. The results showed that the skeleton of PU/CB@FAS sponge was covered with a layer of CB nanoparticles, and elements such as F and Si were found on the skeleton surface. Subsequently, the water contact angle of the PU/CB@FAS sponge was measured to be 151°and the sponge was able to separate oil-water mixtures in different ways. When the sponge was used as an adsorbent material, its saturation capacity was 27.11–59.96 g·g−1 for low-viscosity oils/organic solvents such as soybean oil. Finally, the PU/CB@FAS sponge's photothermal conversion performance was investigated at a light power density of 1 sun (1.0 kW/m2), and the sponge's adsorption capacity for crude oil was increased by 15 times compared with the condition of without light. Thus, the PU/CB@FAS sponge successfully achieved rapid oil-water separation and adsorption for high-viscosity crude oil, showing a broad practical application prospect.

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