Responsive Membranes and Advanced Materials for Sensing and Remediation of Halo-organics

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P42 · $209,400 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Chlorinated organic compounds such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and trichloroethylene (TCE, PCE), and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) continue to pose both remediation challenges and human health risks. Despite decades of remediation effort, chloro- and perfluoro-organic compounds remain Superfund pollutants of national health concern due to their high toxicity, persistence and varied sources of distribution in the environment. Many current treatments (microbial transformation, carbon adsorption, etc.) for the reclamation of contaminated water sources are chemical-intensive, energy-intensive, and/or require post-treatment due to unwanted by-product formation. Project 3 proposes trans-disciplinary integration of the materials surface science and engineering concepts including responsive polymer and reduced graphene oxide 2D membrane science, nanostructured metals, and nutrition and food science using approaches common in the biomedical research field to develop more efficient methods of organic detoxification. The development of nanosized iron- based materials has brought important and promising techniques into the field of environmental remediation. In recent years, zero-valent nanoscale metal (especially bimetallic) particles have attracted growing attention in groundwater remediation of chlorinated solvents. Our overarching goals are to create catalytic domains in robust polymer hollow fibers and in 2D graphene-based membranes for both reductive and oxidative degradation and temperature-responsive polymers for PFAS and PCB sorption/ desorption. Two specific aims are to: 1) to create robust polymeric/gel and 2-D material-based (reduced graphene oxide and composites) metal catalyzed functionalized membranes and materials to enhance TCE, PCE, PCB degradation efficiency and reduce material usage, and demonstration of the use of catalytic membrane filters for two site-based applications, (2) to concentrate and regenerate PFAS and PCB individual compounds using ultra high sorption capacity temperature responsive hydrogel/membranes or localized heating through AMF (alternating magnetic field) using magnetite nanoparticles, and to create functionalized smart adsorptive filters and sensors for PFAS detoxification applications with real-world water samples. Each of these objectives represent highly significant material science advancement in terms of confined reactive nanosized metals in robust membrane domain, and novel temperature swing adsorption/desorption through creation of responsive materials. The applications of our technologies will include collaborations with Rockwell International Site in Russellville, Kentucky for PCBs and the ATKEMIX TEN Site in Louisville, Kentucky for TCE, PCE, chloroform, and carbon tetrachloride mixture, identified water utilities in Eastern Kentucky for PFAS sorption application, and Arcadis Corporation involved with remediation activities.

Key facts

NIH application ID
9841182
Project number
2P42ES007380-22
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
Principal Investigator
Dibakar Bhattacharyya
Activity code
P42
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$209,400
Award type
2
Project period
— → —