Abstract

Reported herein is a novel ultrarobust and biomimetic hierarchically macroporous ceramic membrane that can achieve a high efficiency of up to 99.98% for oil-water separation, while the efficiency remains nearly unchanged even after 10 rounds of use and storage for up to 4 months. The macroporous ceramic membrane is prepared by combining surface hydrophobic coating with an emulsion-assisted template self-assembly of the modified Al2O3 ceramic powder. The as-prepared ceramic membrane is a lightweight material with high strength because the relative density is only ∼1.02 g/cm3; the compressive strength of the as-prepared ceramic membrane is expected to be 15-fold higher than that of the sample prepared using the traditional solid template approach even at a higher porosity due to the principle of self-assembly of Al2O3 particles. It is the mechanism of self-assembly that has broken the traditional principle in ceramic preparation that leads to a perfectly dense packing structure. Moreover, the ceramic membrane maintained excellent oil-water separation efficiency, because of which even after its top layer was damaged by sand impingement, superfine particles could be separated using our macroporous membrane due to the featured interconnected pore structure. We anticipate that this example of the combination of a superwettability theory and a traditional ceramic material can provide an important application direction of advanced oil-water separation techniques.

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