Chicken Feather Protein Dispersant for Effective Crude Oil Dispersion in the Marine Environment
Date
2023
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Abstract
Various studies report that aside from the adverse impact of crude oil on the
marine environment, there is the likelihood that chemical dispersants used on the surface of
water as oil-treating agents themselves possess a degree of toxicity, which have additional effects
on the environment. To eliminate the subject of toxicity, there are several materials in nature
that have the ability to form good emulsions, and such products include protein molecules. In
In this study, chicken feathers, which are known to contain ≥90% protein, were used to formulate a
novel dispersant to disperse crude oil in seawater (35 ppt). Protein from chicken feathers was
extracted and synthesized into the chicken feather protein (CFP) dispersant using deionized
water as a solvent. Emulsions formed from CFP-synthesized dispersants were stable over a
considerably long period of time, whereas the droplet sizes of the emulsion formed were on the
average very small in diameter, making droplet coalescence very slow. The CFP dispersants
exhibited moderate surface and interfacial activity at normal seawater salinity. Using the US
EPA’s baffled flask test, at 800 and 1000 mg/ml CFP surfactant-to-oil ratios, dispersion
effectiveness values of 56.92 and 68.64 vol % were obtained, respectively, which show that CFP has a great potential in crude oil
dispersion. Moreover, the acute toxicity test performed on Nile tilapia showed that CFP was practically nontoxic with an LC50 value
of more than 100 mg/L after 96 hours of exposure. The results obtained showed that the CFP dispersant is environmentally friendly.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Marine Environment, Crude Oil, Dispersion