New towels could help battle oil spills

Published: May 31, 2008 at 4:27 PM
OIL SPILL ON LEBANON'S SHORELINE CAUSES ENVIRONMENTAL CATASTROPHE

LONDON, May 31 (UPI) -- Catastrophic oil spills may soon be cleaned up using super-absorbent towels made from nanowires and impervious to water, U.S. and Japanese researchers say.

The international research team, which also included researchers from Singapore, said it was able to create towels which can successfully separate chemicals when dealing with events such as a major oil spill, The Times of London said Saturday.

The scientists wrote in a published paper that their towels can remain dry despite being placed underwater for an entire month, yet can easily absorb contaminants like oil.

"Given the global scale of severe water pollution arising from oil spills and industrial organic pollutants, this study may prove particularly useful in the design of recyclable absorbents with significant environmental impact," the research team said.

"Our results suggest an innovative material that should find practical applications in the removal of organics, particularly in the field of oil spill cleanup."

The head of the research team, Dr. Francesco Stellacci, told the Times that during the last decade, more than 200,000 tons of oil have found their way into the sea.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Woods in tie for Australian Masters lead (57 min)
Bourdy alone at top at Hong Kong Open (57 min)
MLS: Los Angeles 2, Houston 0 (OT)
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
NBA: Denver 105, LA Lakers 79
NBA: Sacramento 109, Houston 100
fark
Cops who found magic mushroom grow house give up on counting them all, say it would be easier if...
Dramatic exposé on the "Golden Girls", how one show turned a generation of boys into homosexuals;...
Photoshop what this woman is holding
Merlot the cat, who went missing 17 months ago when he was less than a year old, has returned home...
Middle school teacher resigns job she held for 22 years, after she's caught stealing small amounts...
But honestly, who amongst us hasn't mistaken a uniformed police officer for a Sonic drive-through...