Home > Press > Shaking the nanomaterials out: New method to purify contaminated water
![]()  | 
| Physics researchers Yoke Khin Yap, Dongyan Zhang and Bishnu Tiwari have come up with a simple way to remove nanomaterials from contaminated water. Just shake them out. | 
Abstract:
Nano implies small—and that’s great for use in medical devices, beauty products and smartphones—but it’s also a problem. The tiny nanoparticles, nanowires, nanotubes and other nanomaterials that make up our technology eventually find their way into water. The Environmental Protection Agency says more 1,300 commercial products use some kind of nanomaterial. And we just don’t know the full impact on health and the environment.
Nano implies small -- and that's great for use in medical devices, beauty products and smartphones -- but it's also a problem. All these tiny particles get into our water and are difficult to remove. Now, researchers Yoke Khin Yap and Dongyang Zhang have a novel and very simple way to take the nanomaterials out.
CREDIT: Michigan Tech, Sarah Bird
“Look at plastic,” says Yoke Khin Yap, a professor of physics at Michigan Technological University. “These materials changed the world over the past decades—but can we clean up all the plastic in the ocean? We struggle to clean up meter-scale plastics, so what happens when we need to clean on the nano-scale?”
That challenge is the focus of a new study co-authored by Yap, recently published in the American Chemical Society’s journal Applied Materials and Interfaces. Yap and his team found a novel—and very simple—way to remove nearly 100 percent of nanomaterials from water.
The method sounds like a salad dressing recipe: take water, sprinkle in nanomaterials, add oil and shake.
Dimensions of Contaminated Water
Water and oil don’t mix, of course, but shaking them together is what makes salad dressing so great. Only instead of emulsifying and capturing bits of shitake or basil in tiny olive oil bubbles, this mixture grabs nanomaterials.
Dongyan Zhang, a research professor of physics at Michigan Tech, led the experiments, which covered tests on carbon nanotubes, graphene, boron nitride nanotubes, boron nitride nanosheets and zinc oxide nanowires. Those are used in everything from carbon fiber golf clubs to sunscreen.
“These materials are very, very tiny, and that means if you try to remove them and clean them out of contaminated water, that it’s quite difficult,” Zhang says, adding that techniques like filter paper or meshes often don’t work.
What makes shaking work is the shape of one- and two-dimensional nanomaterials. As the oil and water separate after some rigorous shaking, the wires, tubes and sheets settle at the bottom of the oil, just above the water. The oils trap them. However, zero-dimensional nanomaterials, such as nanospheres do not get trapped.
Green Nanotechnology
We don’t have to wait until the final vote is in on whether nanomaterials have a positive or negative impact on people’s health and environmental health. With the simplicity of this technique, and how prolific nanomaterials are becoming, removing nanomaterials makes sense. Also, finding ways to effectively remove nanomaterials sooner rather than later could improve the technology’s market potential.
“Ideally for a new technology to be successfully implemented, it needs to be shown that the technology does not cause adverse effects to the environment,” Yap, Zhang and their co-authors write. “Therefore, unless the potential risks of introducing nanomaterials into the environment are properly addressed, it will hinder the industrialization of products incorporating nanotechnology.”
Purifying water and greening nanotechnology could be as simple as shaking a vial of water and oil.
####
About Michigan Technological University
Michigan Technological University (www.mtu.edu) is a leading public research university developing new technologies and preparing students to create the future for a prosperous and sustainable world. Michigan Tech offers more than 120 undergraduate and graduate degree programs in engineering; forest resources; computing; technology; business; economics; natural, physical and environmental sciences; arts; humanities; and social sciences.
For more information, please click here
Contacts:
Yoke Khin Yap
906-487-2900
Copyright © Michigan Technological University
If you have a comment, please Contact us.Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
| Related Links | 
| Related News Press | 
News and information
    Researchers develop molecular qubits that communicate at telecom frequencies October 3rd, 2025
    Next-generation quantum communication October 3rd, 2025
    "Nanoreactor" cage uses visible light for catalytic and ultra-selective cross-cycloadditions October 3rd, 2025
Videos/Movies
    ICFO researchers overcome long-standing bottleneck in single photon detection with twisted 2D materials August 8th, 2025
Graphene/ Graphite
    Electrifying results shed light on graphene foam as a potential material for lab grown cartilage June 6th, 2025
    Breakthrough in proton barrier films using pore-free graphene oxide: Kumamoto University researchers achieve new milestone in advanced coating technologies September 13th, 2024
Nanotubes/Buckyballs/Fullerenes/Nanorods/Nanostrings
    Enhancing power factor of p- and n-type single-walled carbon nanotubes April 25th, 2025
    Chainmail-like material could be the future of armor: First 2D mechanically interlocked polymer exhibits exceptional flexibility and strength January 17th, 2025
    Innovative biomimetic superhydrophobic coating combines repair and buffering properties for superior anti-erosion December 13th, 2024
Discoveries
    Researchers develop molecular qubits that communicate at telecom frequencies October 3rd, 2025
    Next-generation quantum communication October 3rd, 2025
    "Nanoreactor" cage uses visible light for catalytic and ultra-selective cross-cycloadditions October 3rd, 2025
Announcements
    Rice membrane extracts lithium from brines with greater speed, less waste October 3rd, 2025
    Researchers develop molecular qubits that communicate at telecom frequencies October 3rd, 2025
    Next-generation quantum communication October 3rd, 2025
    "Nanoreactor" cage uses visible light for catalytic and ultra-selective cross-cycloadditions October 3rd, 2025
Interviews/Book Reviews/Essays/Reports/Podcasts/Journals/White papers/Posters
    Spinel-type sulfide semiconductors to operate the next-generation LEDs and solar cells For solar-cell absorbers and green-LED source October 3rd, 2025
    Rice membrane extracts lithium from brines with greater speed, less waste October 3rd, 2025
Environment
    Researchers unveil a groundbreaking clay-based solution to capture carbon dioxide and combat climate change June 6th, 2025
    Onion-like nanoparticles found in aircraft exhaust May 14th, 2025
    SMART researchers pioneer first-of-its-kind nanosensor for real-time iron detection in plants February 28th, 2025
Water
    Taking salt out of the water equation October 7th, 2022
Safety-Nanoparticles/Risk management
    Onion-like nanoparticles found in aircraft exhaust May 14th, 2025
    Closing the gaps — MXene-coating filters can enhance performance and reusability February 28th, 2025
| 
			 | 
	||
| 
			 | 
	||
| The latest news from around the world, FREE | ||
| 
			 | 
	||
| 
			 | 
	||
| Premium Products | ||
| 
			 | 
	||
| 
			Only the news you want to read! 
			 Learn More  | 
		||
| 
			 | 
	||
| 
			Full-service, expert consulting 
			 Learn More  | 
		||
| 
			 | 
	||