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52 pages, 2962 KB  
Review
Sustainable Polyurethane Systems: Integrating Green Synthesis and Closed-Loop Recovery
by Tae Hui Kim, Hyeong Seo Kim and Sang-Ho Lee
Polymers 2026, 18(2), 246; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18020246 - 16 Jan 2026
Abstract
Polyurethanes (PUs) are indispensable polymeric materials widely employed across diverse industrial sectors due to their excellent thermal stability, chemical resistance, adhesion, and mechanical durability. However, the intrinsic three-dimensional crosslinked network that underpins their performance also presents a fundamental barrier to reprocessing and recycling. [...] Read more.
Polyurethanes (PUs) are indispensable polymeric materials widely employed across diverse industrial sectors due to their excellent thermal stability, chemical resistance, adhesion, and mechanical durability. However, the intrinsic three-dimensional crosslinked network that underpins their performance also presents a fundamental barrier to reprocessing and recycling. Consequently, most end-of-life PU waste is currently managed through landfilling or incineration, resulting in significant resource loss and environmental impact. To address these challenges, this review presents an integrated perspective on sustainable PU systems by unifying green synthesis strategies with closed-loop recovery approaches. First, recent advances in bio-based polyols and phosgene-free isocyanate synthesis derived from renewable resources—such as plant oils, carbohydrates, and lignin—are discussed as viable means to reduce dependence on petrochemical feedstocks and mitigate toxicity concerns. Next, emerging chemical recycling methodologies, including acidolysis and aminolysis, are reviewed with a focus on the selective recovery of high-purity monomers. Finally, PU vitrimers and dynamic covalent polymer networks (DCPNs) based on urethane bond exchange reactions are examined as reprocessable architectures that combine thermoplastic-like processability with the mechanical robustness of thermosets. By integrating synthesis, recovery, and reuse within a unified framework, this review aims to outline a coherent pathway toward establishing a sustainable circular economy for PU materials. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Cross-Linked Polymer Network)
22 pages, 3235 KB  
Article
Study on Enhanced Oil Recovery of Nanofluid–Polymer Binary Flooding Technology in Medium-High Permeability Reservoirs
by Liqiang Yang, Xiang Peng, Qun Zhang, Liangwei Xu, Peiwen Xiao, Yuanping Lin, Yanqi Li and Chao Fang
Polymers 2026, 18(2), 227; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18020227 - 15 Jan 2026
Viewed by 28
Abstract
This study investigates the application of nanofluid (iNanoW)–polymer binary flooding system to enhance oil recovery efficiency in medium-to-high permeability reservoirs. Traditional polymer flooding technologies still have the potential for further improvement in these types of reservoirs. Therefore, this study combines iNanoW with the [...] Read more.
This study investigates the application of nanofluid (iNanoW)–polymer binary flooding system to enhance oil recovery efficiency in medium-to-high permeability reservoirs. Traditional polymer flooding technologies still have the potential for further improvement in these types of reservoirs. Therefore, this study combines iNanoW with the polymer flooding system to examine its effects on the rheological properties, injectability, interfacial performance, sweep volume, and recovery factor of the polymer solution. Experimental results show that iNanoW significantly improves the injectability of the polymer solution. The introduction of iNanoW reduces the size of polymer aggregates, as demonstrated by aggregate size and rheological performance experiments. Power-law model analysis reveals that the flow behavior of the polymer solution is further improved with the introduction of iNanoW, manifested by weakened shear-thinning behavior, reduced viscosity, and optimized flowability, which in turn helps to improve oil recovery efficiency. Moreover, iNanoW interacts with polymer molecules, lowering the surface tension and enhancing wettability, thereby improving oil–water separation efficiency. Core flooding experiments show that the introduction of iNanoW significantly increases sweep volume, particularly in medium- and small-pore spaces, where oil recovery efficiencies reached 57.97% and 61.54%, respectively. These results indicate that iNanoW not only optimizes the rheological properties of the polymer solution but also improves fluid distribution during the flooding process, significantly enhancing the overall oil recovery performance. This study provides a new approach to optimizing polymer flooding technology and highlights the potential of iNanoW in improving oil recovery efficiency. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Polymer Applications)
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28 pages, 8828 KB  
Article
Oil-Water Biphasic Metal-Organic Supramolecular Gel for Lost Circulation Control: Formulation Optimization, Gelation Mechanism, and Plugging Performance
by Qingwang Li, Songlei Li, Ye Zhang, Chaogang Chen, Xiaochuan Wu, Menglai Li, Shubiao Pan and Junfei Peng
Gels 2026, 12(1), 74; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels12010074 - 15 Jan 2026
Viewed by 84
Abstract
Lost circulation in oil-based drilling fluids (OBDFs) remains difficult to mitigate because particulate lost circulation materials depend on bridging/packing and gel systems for aqueous media often lack OBDF compatibility and controllable in situ sealing. A dual-precursor oil–water biphasic metal–organic supramolecular gel enables rapid [...] Read more.
Lost circulation in oil-based drilling fluids (OBDFs) remains difficult to mitigate because particulate lost circulation materials depend on bridging/packing and gel systems for aqueous media often lack OBDF compatibility and controllable in situ sealing. A dual-precursor oil–water biphasic metal–organic supramolecular gel enables rapid in situ sealing in OBDF loss zones. The optimized formulation uses an oil-phase to aqueous gelling-solution volume ratio of 10:3, with 2.0 wt% Span 85, 12.5 wt% TXP-4, and 5.0 wt% NaAlO2. Apparent-viscosity measurements and ATR–FTIR analysis were used to evaluate the effects of temperature, time, pH, and shear on MOSG gelation. Furthermore, the structural characteristics and performances of MOSGs were systematically investigated by combining microstructural characterization, thermogravimetric analysis, rheological tests, simulated fracture-plugging experiments, and anti-shear evaluations. The results indicate that elevated temperatures (30–70 °C) and mildly alkaline conditions in the aqueous gelling solution (pH ≈ 8.10–8.30) promote P–O–Al coordination and strengthen hydrogen bonding, thereby facilitating the formation of a three-dimensional network. In contrast, strong shear disrupts the nascent network and delays gelation. The optimized MOSGs rapidly exhibit pronounced viscoelasticity and thermal resistance (~193 °C); under high shear (380 rpm), the viscosity retention exceeds 60% and the viscosity recovery exceeds 70%. In plugging tests, MOSG forms a dense sealing layer, achieving a pressure-bearing gradient of 2.27 MPa/m in simulated permeable formations and markedly improving the fracture pressure-bearing capacity in simulated fractured formations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advanced Technology for Oil and Nature Gas Exploration)
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21 pages, 2397 KB  
Article
Anomalous Shale Oil Flow in Nanochannels: Perspective from Nanofluidic Experiments
by Chuang Dong, Yaxiong Li, Xinrui Lyu, Dongling Xia, Wei Zhang, Xinkun Zhang and Qing You
Processes 2026, 14(2), 292; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14020292 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 86
Abstract
Shale oil is primarily hosted within nanopores, where its flow behavior exhibits significant deviations from classical Darcy flow. The combined influences of nanoscale confinement and interfacial interactions represent key scientific challenges that hinder efficient shale oil recovery. The results show that under 25 [...] Read more.
Shale oil is primarily hosted within nanopores, where its flow behavior exhibits significant deviations from classical Darcy flow. The combined influences of nanoscale confinement and interfacial interactions represent key scientific challenges that hinder efficient shale oil recovery. The results show that under 25 °C and 1 MPa, the displacement distances of shale oil within 12 s in 100, 200, and 300 nm channels were 2.88, 5.67, and 11.01 mm, respectively. As pore size decreases, flow capacity drops sharply, and the displacement–time relationship evolves from quasi-linear to strongly nonlinear, indicating pronounced nanoscale non-Darcy behavior. By incorporating an equivalent resistance coefficient into the plate-channel flow model, the experimental data were accurately fitted, enabling quantitative evaluation of the additional flow resistance induced by nanoconfinement and interfacial adsorption. The equivalent resistance coefficient increases markedly with decreasing pore size but decreases progressively with increasing temperature and driving pressure. Increasing temperature and pressure partially mitigates nanoconfinement effects. In 200 nm channels, the equivalent resistance coefficient decreases from 1.87 to 1.20 as temperature rises from 25 to 80 °C, while in 100 nm channels it decreases from 2.43 to 1.65 as driving pressure increases from 1 to 6 MPa. Nevertheless, even under high-temperature and high-pressure conditions, shale-oil flow does not fully recover to ideal Darcy behavior. This work establishes a nanofluidic-based prediction and evaluation framework for shale oil flow, offering theoretical guidance and experimental reference for unconventional reservoir development and the optimization of enhanced oil recovery strategies. Full article
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21 pages, 2728 KB  
Article
Two Engineered Bacillus subtilis Surfactin High-Producers: Effects of Culture Medium, and Potential Agricultural and Petrochemical Applications
by Graciely Gomes Corrêa, Elvio Henrique Benatto Perino, Cristiano José de Andrade, Maliheh Vahidinasab, Lucas Degang, Behnoush Hosseini, Lars Lilge, Vitória Fernanda Bertolazzi Zocca, Jens Pfannstiel, Danielle Biscaro Pedrolli, Rudolf Hausmann and Jonas Contiero
Biology 2026, 15(2), 146; https://doi.org/10.3390/biology15020146 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 117
Abstract
Two genetically engineered Bacillus subtilis strains, BMV9 and BsB6, were evaluated in terms of culture medium (effect of nutrients on surfactin yield) and potential biotechnological applications of surfactin in agriculture and the petrochemical industry. BMV9 (spo0A3; abrB*; ΔmanPA; [...] Read more.
Two genetically engineered Bacillus subtilis strains, BMV9 and BsB6, were evaluated in terms of culture medium (effect of nutrients on surfactin yield) and potential biotechnological applications of surfactin in agriculture and the petrochemical industry. BMV9 (spo0A3; abrB*; ΔmanPA; sfp+) is, to date, the highest surfactin producer reported scientifically, and BsB6 is a sfp+ laboratory derivative strain that has also demonstrated considerable production potential. To assess their performance, fermentation experiments were conducted in shake flasks using two different culture media, a mineral salt medium and a complex medium, each supplemented with 2% (w/v) glucose. Lipopeptides (surfactin and fengycin) were extracted and quantified at multiple time points (up to 48 h) via high-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC). Optical density, residual glucose, and pH were monitored throughout the cultivation. In parallel, microbial growth in both media were also validated in small-scale cultivation approaches. Antifungal activity of culture supernatants and lipopeptide extracts was tested against two Diaporthe species, key phytopathogens in soybean crops. Given the agricultural relevance of these pathogens, the biocontrol potential of lipopeptides represents a sustainable alternative to conventional chemical fungicides. Additionally, oil displacement tests were performed to evaluate the efficacy of surfactin in enhanced oil recovery (EOR), bioremediation, and related petrochemical processes. High-resolution LC-MS/MS analysis enabled structural characterization and relative quantification of the lipopeptides. Overall, these investigations provide a comprehensive comparison of strain production performance and the associated impact of cultivation media, aiming to define the optimal conditions for economically viable surfactin production and to explore its broader biotechnological applications in agriculture and the petrochemical industry. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Microbiology)
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22 pages, 8822 KB  
Article
Potential Recovery and Recycling of Condensate Water from Atlas Copco ZR315 FF Industrial Air Compressors
by Ali Benmoussa, Zakaria Chalhe, Benaissa Elfahime and Mohammed Radouani
Inventions 2026, 11(1), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/inventions11010010 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 138
Abstract
This research examines the feasibility of recovering and recycling condensate water, a waste byproduct generated by Atlas Copco ZR315 FF industrial air compressors utilizing oil-free rotary screw technology with integrated dryers. Given the growing severity of global water scarcity, finding alternative water sources [...] Read more.
This research examines the feasibility of recovering and recycling condensate water, a waste byproduct generated by Atlas Copco ZR315 FF industrial air compressors utilizing oil-free rotary screw technology with integrated dryers. Given the growing severity of global water scarcity, finding alternative water sources is essential for sustainable industrial practices. This study specifically evaluates the potential of capturing and treating compressed air condensate as a viable method for water recovery. The investigation analyzes both the quantity and quality of condensate water produced by the ZR315 FF unit. It contrasts this recovery approach with traditional water production methods, such as desalination and atmospheric water generation (AWG) via dehumidification. The findings demonstrate that recovering condensate water from industrial air compressors is a cost-effective and energy-efficient substitute for conventional water production, especially in water-stressed areas like Morocco. The results show a significant opportunity to reduce industrial water usage and provide a sustainable source of process water. This research therefore supports the application of circular economy principles in industrial water management and offers practical solutions for overcoming water scarcity challenges within manufacturing environments. Full article
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18 pages, 4233 KB  
Article
Study on the Displacement and Gas Storage Characteristics of Flue Gas Gravity Flooding in Fractured Tight Oil Reservoirs
by Aiqing Cao, Xirui Zhao, Zhaomin Li, Zhengxiao Xu, Xinge Sun, Mengyuan Zhang, Binfei Li and Fengxiang Yang
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 832; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020832 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 145
Abstract
Flue gas is an industrial waste gas produced by the combustion of fossil fuels. Its application in reservoir development can increase oil recovery factor and achieve underground storage of CO2. Flue gas gravity flooding experiments were conducted to clarify the displacement [...] Read more.
Flue gas is an industrial waste gas produced by the combustion of fossil fuels. Its application in reservoir development can increase oil recovery factor and achieve underground storage of CO2. Flue gas gravity flooding experiments were conducted to clarify the displacement and storage characteristics of flue gas gravity flooding. The results show that the experiment can be divided into three stages based on the output characteristics, and the oil recovery factor curve exhibits a stepwise increase. During the pure oil production stage, the crude oil output is approximately half of the total output. When the experimental pressure is 18 MPa, the oil recovery factor is 11.53%. As the experimental pressure increases, the extraction and viscosity reduction effects of the flue gas are enhanced. Therefore, the oil recovery factor gradually increases and the crude oil in the micropores and small pores is better displaced. The storage rate of flue gas is 8.42% at a pressure of 18 MPa. When the experimental pressure increases to 25 MPa, the storage rate of flue gas reaches 19.70%. The increase in permeability and the extension of displacement time can effectively improve the oil recovery factor. The research results provide a new approach for the resource utilization of flue gas and offer theoretical support for flue gas flooding in tight reservoirs. Full article
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25 pages, 2812 KB  
Article
Field-Scale Techno-Economic Assessment and Real Options Valuation of Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage—Enhanced Oil Recovery Project Under Market Uncertainty
by Chang Liu, Cai-Shuai Li and Xiao-Qiang Zheng
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 805; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020805 - 13 Jan 2026
Viewed by 198
Abstract
This study develops a field-based techno-economic model and decision framework for a CO2-enhanced oil recovery and storage project under joint market uncertainty. Historical drilling and completion expenditures calibrate investment cost functions, and three years of production data are fitted with segmented [...] Read more.
This study develops a field-based techno-economic model and decision framework for a CO2-enhanced oil recovery and storage project under joint market uncertainty. Historical drilling and completion expenditures calibrate investment cost functions, and three years of production data are fitted with segmented hyperbolic Arps curves to forecast 20-year oil output. Markov-chain models jointly generate internally consistent pathways for crude oil, ETA, and purchased CO2 prices, which are embedded in a Monte Carlo valuation. The framework outputs probability distributions of NPV and deferral option value; under the mid scenario, their mean values are USD 18.1M and USD 2.0M, respectively. PRCC-based global sensitivity analysis identifies the dominant value drivers as oil price, CO2 price, utilization factor, oil density, pipeline length, and injection volume. Techno-economic boundary maps in the joint oil and CO2 price space then delineate feasible regions and break-even thresholds for key design parameters. Results indicate that CCUS-EOR viability cannot be inferred from oil price or any single cost factor alone, but requires coordinated consideration of subsurface constraints, engineering configuration, and multi-market dynamics, including the value of waiting in unfavorable regimes, contributing to low-carbon development and sustainable energy transition objectives. Full article
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21 pages, 3620 KB  
Article
Geomechanical Analysis of Hot Fluid Injection in Thermal Enhanced Oil Recovery
by Mina S. Khalaf
Energies 2026, 19(2), 386; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19020386 - 13 Jan 2026
Viewed by 98
Abstract
Hot-fluid injection in thermal-enhanced oil recovery (thermal-EOR, TEOR) imposes temperature-driven volumetric strains that can substantially alter in situ stresses, fracture geometry, and wellbore/reservoir integrity, yet existing TEOR modeling has not fully captured coupled thermo-poroelastic (thermo-hydro-mechanical) effects on fracture aperture, fracture-tip behavior, and stress [...] Read more.
Hot-fluid injection in thermal-enhanced oil recovery (thermal-EOR, TEOR) imposes temperature-driven volumetric strains that can substantially alter in situ stresses, fracture geometry, and wellbore/reservoir integrity, yet existing TEOR modeling has not fully captured coupled thermo-poroelastic (thermo-hydro-mechanical) effects on fracture aperture, fracture-tip behavior, and stress rotation within a displacement discontinuity method (DDM) framework. This study aims to examine the influence of sustained hot-fluid injection on stress redistribution, hydraulic-fracture deformation, and fracture stability in thermal-EOR by accounting for coupled thermal, hydraulic, and mechanical interactions. This study develops a fully coupled thermo-poroelastic DDM formulation in which fracture-surface normal and shear displacement discontinuities, together with fluid and heat influx, act as boundary sources to compute time-dependent stresses, pore pressure, and temperature, while internal fracture fluid flow (Poiseuille-based volume balance), heat transport (conduction–advection with rock exchange), and mixed-mode propagation criteria are included. A representative scenario considers an initially isothermal hydraulic fracture grown to 32 m, followed by 12 months of hot-fluid injection, with temperature contrasts of ΔT = 0–100 °C and reduced pumping rate. Results show that the hydraulic-fracture aperture increases under isothermal and modest heating (ΔT = 25 °C) and remains nearly stable near ΔT = 50 °C, but progressively narrows for ΔT = 75–100 °C despite continued injection, indicating potential injectivity decline driven by thermally induced compressive stresses. Hot injection also tightens fracture tips, restricting unintended propagation, and produces pronounced near-fracture stress amplification and re-orientation: minimum principal stress increases by 6 MPa for ΔT = 50 °C and 10 MPa for ΔT = 100 °C, with principal-stress rotation reaching 70–90° in regions adjacent to the fracture plane and with markedly elevated shear stresses that may promote natural-fracture activation. These findings show that temperature effects can directly influence injectivity, fracture containment, and the risk of unintended fracture or natural-fracture activation, underscoring the importance of temperature-aware geomechanical planning and injection-strategy design in field operations. Incorporating these effects into project design can help operators anticipate injectivity decline, improve fracture containment, and reduce geomechanical uncertainty during long-term hot-fluid injection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section H1: Petroleum Engineering)
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26 pages, 11478 KB  
Article
Controls on Microscopic Distribution and Flow Characteristics of Remaining Oil in Tight Sandstone Reservoirs: Chang 7 Reservoirs, Yanchang Formation, Ordos Basin
by Yawen He, Tao Yi, Linjun Yu, Yulongzhuo Chen, Jing Yang, Buhuan Zhang, Pengbo He, Zhiyu Wu and Wei Dang
Minerals 2026, 16(1), 72; https://doi.org/10.3390/min16010072 - 13 Jan 2026
Viewed by 84
Abstract
The Chang 7 shale oil reservoirs of the Yanchang Formation in the Heishui Area of the Ordos Basin display typical tight sandstone characteristics, marked by complex microscopic pore structures and limited flow capacity, which severely constrain efficient development. Using a suite of laboratory [...] Read more.
The Chang 7 shale oil reservoirs of the Yanchang Formation in the Heishui Area of the Ordos Basin display typical tight sandstone characteristics, marked by complex microscopic pore structures and limited flow capacity, which severely constrain efficient development. Using a suite of laboratory techniques—including nuclear magnetic resonance, mercury intrusion porosimetry, oil–water relative permeability, spontaneous imbibition experiments, scanning electron microscopy, and thin section analysis—this study systematically characterizes representative tight sandstone samples and examines the microscopic distribution of remaining oil, flow behavior, and their controlling factors. Results indicate that residual oil is mainly stored in nanoscale micropores, whereas movable fluids are predominantly concentrated in medium to large pores. The bimodal or trimodal T2 spectra reflect the presence of multiscale pore–fracture systems. Spontaneous imbibition and relative permeability experiments reveal low displacement efficiency (average 41.07%), with flow behavior controlled by capillary forces and imbibition rates exhibiting a three-stage pattern. The primary factors influencing movable fluid distribution include mineral composition (quartz, feldspar, lithic fragments), pore–throat structure (pore size, sorting, displacement pressure), physical properties (porosity, permeability), and heterogeneity (fractal dimension). High quartz and illite contents enhance effective flow pathways, whereas lithic fragments and swelling clay minerals significantly impede fluid migration. Overall, this study clarifies the coupled “lithology–pore–flow” control mechanism, providing a theoretical foundation and practical guidance for the fine characterization and efficient development of tight oil reservoirs. The findings can directly guide the optimization of hydraulic fracturing and enhanced oil recovery strategies by identifying high-mobility zones and key mineralogical constraints, enabling targeted stimulation and improved recovery in the Chang 7 and analogous tight reservoirs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Exploration Methods and Applications)
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20 pages, 2128 KB  
Article
Valorization of Carrot Processing Waste Through Lycopene Recovery and Development of Functional Oil-Enriching Agents
by María Celia Román, Mathias Riveros-Gómez, Daniela Zalazar-García, Inés María Ranea-Vera, Celina Podetti, María Paula Fabani, Rosa Rodriguez and Germán Mazza
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 789; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020789 - 13 Jan 2026
Viewed by 94
Abstract
This study demonstrates a sustainable, integrated pathway for valorizing carrot processing by-products through solvent-free lycopene recovery. The approach combines optimized infrared dehydration with ultrasound-assisted extraction using edible oils. Drying kinetics were modeled at multiple temperatures, with the Midilli model providing the best fit [...] Read more.
This study demonstrates a sustainable, integrated pathway for valorizing carrot processing by-products through solvent-free lycopene recovery. The approach combines optimized infrared dehydration with ultrasound-assisted extraction using edible oils. Drying kinetics were modeled at multiple temperatures, with the Midilli model providing the best fit (R2 > 0.99), enabling accurate prediction of moisture content removal while preserving bioactive compounds. Optimization via Box–Behnken design identified efficient extraction conditions (49.7–60 °C, 10 mL/g, 60 min), achieving lycopene equivalent (LE) yields of 3.07 to 5.00 mg/kg oil. Sunflower and blended oils showed comparable performance under maximum sonication power (240 W), with strong agreement between predicted and experimental yields. The process generated two valuable outputs: a functional lycopene-enriched oil and an exhausted carrot powder co-product, the latter retaining its crude fiber content despite other compositional changes. This research presents a scalable, green methodology that aligns with circular economy principles, transforming agro-industrial waste into functional food ingredients without organic solvents. Thus, the developed approach establishes a transferable model for the sustainable valorization of carotenoid-rich residues, contributing directly to greener food production systems. By providing a practical technological framework to convert waste into wealth, this work supports the fundamental transition toward a circular bioeconomy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Bioeconomy of Sustainability)
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25 pages, 2195 KB  
Article
Study on the Dual Enhancement Effect of Nanoparticle–Surfactant Composite Systems on Oil Recovery Rates
by Gen Li, Bin Huang, Yong Yuan, Cheng Fu and Keliang Wang
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(2), 102; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16020102 - 12 Jan 2026
Viewed by 189
Abstract
Nanoparticle–surfactant composite flooding systems significantly enhance oil recovery through synergistic effects. When the optimal ratio of SiO2 nanoparticles to nonionic surfactant alkylphenol polyoxyethylene ether (OP-10) in the composite system is 3:2, the oil–water interfacial tension (IFT) decreases to 0.005 mN/m, and the [...] Read more.
Nanoparticle–surfactant composite flooding systems significantly enhance oil recovery through synergistic effects. When the optimal ratio of SiO2 nanoparticles to nonionic surfactant alkylphenol polyoxyethylene ether (OP-10) in the composite system is 3:2, the oil–water interfacial tension (IFT) decreases to 0.005 mN/m, and the contact angle changes from the original 128° to 42°, achieving effective wettability alteration. Core displacement experiments demonstrate that the recovery rate using nanoparticles alone is 46.8%, and using surfactant alone is 52.3%, while the composite system achieves 71.5%, representing a 39.2 percentage point improvement over water flooding. The composite system operates through multiple mechanisms including interfacial tension reduction, wettability alteration, stable emulsion formation, and enhanced sweep efficiency. The wedging effect of nanoparticles at pore throats and the interfacial activity of surfactants form significant synergistic enhancement, providing a new technical pathway for efficient development of low-permeability reservoirs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy and Catalysis)
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19 pages, 1900 KB  
Article
Experimental Evaluation of the Bioenergy Potential of Enterolobium cyclocarpum (Orejero) Fruit Peel Residue
by Zully-Esmeralda Gómez-Rosales, Paola-Andrea Hernández-Mejía, Andrés-Gonzalo Forero-González, Johanna-Karina Solano-Meza, Javier Rodrigo-Ilarri and María-Elena Rodrigo-Clavero
Energies 2026, 19(2), 360; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19020360 - 12 Jan 2026
Viewed by 198
Abstract
This study presents an experimental evaluation of the bioenergy potential of Enterolobium cyclocarpum (“orejero”) fruit peel residue, an underutilized agroforestry by-product in tropical America. Although the species is widely used for shade and fodder in livestock systems, its fruit peel has not yet [...] Read more.
This study presents an experimental evaluation of the bioenergy potential of Enterolobium cyclocarpum (“orejero”) fruit peel residue, an underutilized agroforestry by-product in tropical America. Although the species is widely used for shade and fodder in livestock systems, its fruit peel has not yet been characterized for energy recovery purposes. Fruit samples were collected in rural areas of Tesalia (Huila, Colombia), and the peel fraction was analyzed in certified laboratories. The moisture content of the peel was determined as 11 wt%, and the lower heating value was measured as 0.015 TJ/t following ASTM E711-06. Elemental analysis according to ASTM D5373-16 yielded (dry basis): 37.2 wt% C, 4.09 wt% H, 0.45 wt% N and 0.13 wt% S. Based on Colombian cultivation and production data, the theoretical energy potential was estimated as 3.6 TJ/year per hectare. The technical energy potential reached 0.18 and 0.21 TJ/year per hectare for combustion and gasification, respectively. CO2-equivalent emissions were also estimated for both conversion routes, revealing a trade-off between the higher energy yield and higher specific emissions associated with gasification. Overall, the results show that E. cyclocarpum fruit peel residue has a calorific value comparable to widely used agri-food residues in Colombia (e.g., sugarcane bagasse and oil palm fiber), but with a substantially higher per-hectare energy potential due to its large residue fraction. Its high availability, favorable fuel properties, and compatibility with decentralized combustion and gasification technologies support its use as a promising feedstock for bioenergy generation in rural or off-grid areas, in line with circular economy and sustainable energy transition strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Biomass and Waste-to-Energy for Sustainable Energy Production)
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37 pages, 1731 KB  
Review
Analysis of Major Global Oil Spill Incidents: Part 1—Environmental and Ecological Impacts
by Panagiota Keramea, George Zodiatis and Georgios Sylaios
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2026, 14(2), 153; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse14020153 - 11 Jan 2026
Viewed by 207
Abstract
Oil spills remain among the most severe anthropogenic threats to marine ecosystems, with consequences that span ecological, socio-economic, and human health domains. While numerous studies have investigated individual accidents such as Exxon Valdez, Prestige, and Deepwater Horizon, systematic comparative analyses across multiple large-scale [...] Read more.
Oil spills remain among the most severe anthropogenic threats to marine ecosystems, with consequences that span ecological, socio-economic, and human health domains. While numerous studies have investigated individual accidents such as Exxon Valdez, Prestige, and Deepwater Horizon, systematic comparative analyses across multiple large-scale incidents remain limited. This review addresses this critical gap by synthesizing findings from fourteen major oil spills worldwide. It examines the roles of oil type and environmental conditions, emphasizing impacts on fish, seabirds, shoreline habitats, and benthic organisms, as well as on long-term ecosystem recovery. Across cases, coastal waters, shorelines, and benthic communities consistently emerged as the most impacted habitats, reflecting both the persistence of oil in nearshore environments and the challenges of long-term restoration. Biologically, all trophic levels were affected: plankton, fish, seabirds, and benthic invertebrates were highly vulnerable, while marine mammals and reptiles suffered population-level effects. By integrating cross-case evidence, this review highlights recurring patterns, key uncertainties, and long-lasting ecosystem disruptions that persist decades after acute events. The Deepwater Horizon spill stands out as the most ecologically severe incident, whereas earlier spills such as Exxon Valdez, Erika, and Prestige remain benchmarks for ecological damage. Thus, this state-of-the-art review provides the most comprehensive comparative assessment of oil spill impacts to date and offers technical recommendations for enhancing preparedness, response, and resilience in the face of future spills. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Marine Environmental Science)
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24 pages, 2518 KB  
Review
A Review of Oil–Water Separation Technology for Transformer Oil Leakage Wastewater
by Lijuan Yao, Han Shi, Wen Qi, Baozhong Song, Jun Zhou, Wenquan Sun and Yongjun Sun
Water 2026, 18(2), 180; https://doi.org/10.3390/w18020180 - 9 Jan 2026
Viewed by 262
Abstract
The oily wastewater produced by transformer oil leakage contains pollutants such as mineral oil, metal particles, aged oil and additives, which can disrupt the dissolved oxygen balance in water bodies, pollute soil and endanger human health through the food chain, causing serious environmental [...] Read more.
The oily wastewater produced by transformer oil leakage contains pollutants such as mineral oil, metal particles, aged oil and additives, which can disrupt the dissolved oxygen balance in water bodies, pollute soil and endanger human health through the food chain, causing serious environmental pollution. Effective oil–water separation technology is the key to ecological protection and resource recovery. This paper reviews the principles, influencing factors and research progress of traditional (gravity sedimentation, air flotation, adsorption, demulsification) and new (nanocomposite adsorption, metal–organic skeleton materials, superhydrophobic/superlipophilic modified films) transformer oil–water separation technologies. Traditional technologies are mostly applicable to large-particle-free oil and are difficult to adapt to complex matrix wastewater. However, the new technology has significant advantages in separation efficiency (up to over 99.5%), selectivity and cycling stability (with a performance retention rate of over 85% after 20–60 cycles), breaking through the bottlenecks of traditional methods. In the future, it is necessary to develop low-cost and efficient separation technologies, promote the research and development of intelligent responsive materials, upgrade low-carbon preparation processes and their engineering applications, support environmental protection treatment in the power industry and encourage the coupling of material innovation and processes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Wastewater Treatment and Reuse)
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