homehome Home chatchat Notifications


New hydrogel system could help us clean micropollutants from water quickly and sustainably

While still in early stages, the researchers are working to make it commercially available

Fermin Koop
January 11, 2024 @ 12:18 am

share Share

Micropollutants, chemically diverse materials that can be harmful to human health and the environment, are usually removed from water with activated carbon filters. However, creating these filters is an energy-intensive process, requiring high temperatures and large facilities. Now, researchers have come up with an alternative — a hydrogel.

Hydrogels developed at MIT can be used to remove micropollutants from water. Image credits: Sebastian Gonzalez Quintero/MassArt.

“Zwitterionic” is not a word you hear too often. But you’re about to hear it a lot here.

Patrick Doyle of the MIT Department of Chemical Engineering and a team of researchers worked with zwitterionic hydrogels to filter both organic and inorganic micropollutants from water with minimal operational complexity. Zwitterionic molecules are those that have an equal number of positive and negative charges.

An attractive option

Just as a magnet has a north and south pole, a zwitterion is dipolar, carrying a positive charge on one side and negative charge on the other. Because many organic and inorganic micropollutants are charged, the researchers have been looking at how to use zwitterionic molecules to capture them.

These unique molecules have been used in the past as coating on membranes used for water treatment because of their nonfouling properties. But in the newly created system, they are used to form the backbone within the hydrogel — a three-dimensional porous network of polymer chains that is infused with a substantial water content.

“Zwitterionic molecules have very strong attraction to water compared to other materials which are used to make hydrogels or polymers,” Devashish Gokhale, study author, said in a news release. Also, their positive and negative charges make the hydrogels have lower compressibility, which makes the hydrogels porous and robust.

This is an important feature that allows for scaling up of a hydrogel-based system for use in water treatment, the researchers said. They are now working to commercialize the system for both at-home and industrial-scale applications. Initial tests show that the hydrogels can eliminate six chemically diverse micropollutants at least 10 times faster than activated carbon.

Greener cleaning

About four kilograms of coal are needed to make one kilogram of activated carbon, according to Gokhale. This means a lot of carbon dioxide is released into the environment. The World Economic Forum estimates that global water and wastewater treatment accounts for 5% of annual emissions. Just in the US, it emits 45 million tons per year.

This raises the need to create methods that have smaller climate footprints than activated carbon. This is where the new hydrogel system enters the fold. Also, as countries start to more carefully regulate the safety of their water resources, as with the EPA’s recent proposal to regulate PFAS chemicals, the need for effective water treatment processes grows.

“You have whole technologies which are focusing only on PFAS, and then you have other technologies for lead and metals. When you start thinking about removing all of these contaminants from water, you end up with designs which have a very large number of unit operations. And that’s an issue,” Gokhale said in a news release.

The study was published in the journal Nature Water.

share Share

Archaeologists May Have Found Odysseus’ Sanctuary on Ithaca

A new discovery ties myth to place, revealing centuries of cult worship and civic ritual.

The World’s Largest Sand Battery Just Went Online in Finland. It could change renewable energy

This sand battery system can store 1,000 megawatt-hours of heat for weeks at a time.

A Hidden Staircase in a French Church Just Led Archaeologists Into the Middle Ages

They pulled up a church floor and found a staircase that led to 1500 years of history.

The World’s Largest Camera Is About to Change Astronomy Forever

A new telescope camera promises a 10-year, 3.2-billion-pixel journey through the southern sky.

AI 'Reanimated' a Murder Victim Back to Life to Speak in Court (And Raises Ethical Quandaries)

AI avatars of dead people are teaching courses and testifying in court. Even with the best of intentions, the emerging practice of AI ‘reanimations’ is an ethical quagmire.

This Rare Viking Burial of a Woman and Her Dog Shows That Grief and Love Haven’t Changed in a Thousand Years

The power of loyalty, in this life and the next.

This EV Battery Charges in 18 Seconds and It’s Already Street Legal

RML’s VarEVolt battery is blazing a trail for ultra-fast EV charging and hypercar performance.

DARPA Just Beamed Power Over 5 Miles Using Lasers and Used It To Make Popcorn

A record-breaking laser beam could redefine how we send power to the world's hardest places.

Why Do Some Birds Sing More at Dawn? It's More About Social Behavior Than The Environment

Study suggests birdsong patterns are driven more by social needs than acoustics.

Nonproducing Oil Wells May Be Emitting 7 Times More Methane Than We Thought

A study measured methane flow from more than 450 nonproducing wells across Canada, but thousands more remain unevaluated.