Project 4: Designing selective sorbents for water remediation

Obinna Nwokonkwo

Congratulations to Obinna Nwokonkwo for passing Quals!

August 31, 2021

Congratulations to Obinna Nwokonkwo for passing his Qualifying Exams this spring!  Obinna is a graduate student in Chemical Engineering at Arizona State University working on Project 4 with mentor Chris Muhich.

Paul Westerhoff, Pedro JJ Alvarez, Jaehong Kim, Qilin Li, Alessandro Alabastri, Naomi J Halas, Dino Villagran, Julie Zimmerman, and Michael S Wong. 2021. “Utilizing the broad electromagnetic spectrum and unique nanoscale properties for chemical-free water treatment.” Current Opinion in Chemical Engineering, 33. Publisher's VersionAbstract
Clean water is critical for drinking, industrial processes, and aquatic organisms. Existing water treatment and infrastructure are chemically intensive and based on nearly century-old technologies that fail to meet modern large and decentralized communities. The next-generation of water processes can transition from outdated technologies by utilizing nanomaterials to harness energy from across the electromagnetic spectrum, enabling electrified and solar-based technologies. The last decade was marked by tremendous improvements in nanomaterial design, synthesis, characterization, and assessment of material properties. Realizing the benefits of these advances requires placing greater attention on embedding nanomaterials onto and into surfaces within reactors and applying external energy sources. This will allow nanomaterial-based processes to replace Victorian-aged, chemical intensive water treatment technologies.

Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science

Julie Zimmerman's lab is in the Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering at the Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science.  Dr. Zimmerman is the MEMCARE-SRC Deputy Director and leader of Project 4, which is developing more selective  and safer nanomaterials for water treatment.

Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering at Arizona State University

ASU collaborators on Project 4 are Paul Westerhoff's lab in the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment and Chris Muhich's lab in the School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy. Dr. Westerhoff focuses on the safe use of nanomaterial-based technologies for water treatment. Dr. Muhich uses computational  and experimental techniques to study environmentally relevant metal oxide reactions.

2021 Feb 22
J Kidd, P Westerhoff, and A Maynard. 4/22/2021. “Survey of Industrial Perceptions for the Use of Nanomaterials for In-Home Drinking Water Purification Devices.” NanoImpact, 22, 100320, Pp. 1-6. Publisher's VersionAbstract

As businesses, specifically technology developers and industrial suppliers, strive to meet growing demand for higher quality drinking water, the use of engineered nanomaterials in commercial point-of-use (POU) in-home water purification devices are becoming an increasingly important option. Anecdotally, some businesses appear wary of developing and marketing nanomaterial-enabled devices because of concerns that they will face onerous regulation and consumer pushback. However, little of substance is known about business perceptions of and attitudes toward the use of engineered nanomaterials in POU water purification devices, or how these compare with consumer perceptions. To address this knowledge-gap, we administered a 14-question survey among 65 participants from US-based industrial companies focused on drinking water purification. Our results indicate that the dominant concerns for businesses are costs and public perceptions associated with nanomaterial-enabled POU devices for drinking water purification. Cost-specific barriers include competition from more conventional technologies, and tensions between operational versus capital costs. 57% of respondents were concerned or very concerned that public perceptions will influence the long-term viability of nanomaterial-enabled POU devices for drinking water purification. 49% of respondents stated that government regulation of nanomaterials would be the preferred approach to ensure public safety, followed by the certification of POU devices (28%). When asked about specific nanomaterials and their potential use in POU devices for drinking water purification, respondents ranked carbon nanotubes as the nanomaterial with highest concern for environmental health and safety, followed by silver, titanium dioxide, zinc oxide, and copper. Respondents ranked nanoclays as the nanomaterial with highest likelihood for public acceptance, followed by silica, cerium oxide, titanium dioxide, and aluminum oxide

Ken Niimi

Ken Niimi

Project 4 Trainee
Master's Student in Environmental Engineering, Ira A Fulton Schools of Engineering, Arizona State University

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