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MEAM Seminar: “Surfactants, Colloids, and Electrolytes: Engineering Transport Phenomena for Energy and the Environment”

March 21, 2024 at 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM
Details
Date: March 21, 2024
Time: 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM
Event Category: Seminar
  • Event Tags:,
  • Organizer
    Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics
    Phone: 215-746-1818
    Venue
    Glandt Forum, Singh Center for Nanotechnology 3205 Walnut Street
    Philadelphia
    PA 19104
    Google Map

    Fluid flows and mass transport mediate countless natural and engineered processes, ranging from the spreading of pollutants to carbon capture and water cleaning. In this talk, I will share three examples of my research where fundamental ideas in transport phenomena are applied to inform technologies with direct impact on energy and the environment. First, I will discuss surfactants, chemicals that preferentially adsorb to interfaces between fluids and critically affect their motion. My work has revealed that these substances play a central role in the engineering of coatings aimed at reducing the drag of marine vessels, resulting in the discovery of a physicochemical lengthscale capable of predicting the effectiveness of a given coating. I will also demonstrate how the spontaneous migration of solid particles in chemical gradients — an effect known as diffusiophoresis— can be used to filter microplastics from water without a membrane. I will present results quantifying the efficiency of this separation process, which is a key step towards novel water remediation technologies with enhanced energy and cost efficiency. Finally, I will describe how fluid flows, driven solely by natural evaporation, can dramatically boost the concentration of electrolytes in porous materials. I will illustrate the physics of this process and how it can be leveraged for the extraction of minerals key to the energy transition, such as lithium, from natural brines.